Home :: Books :: Nonfiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction

Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Aztecs : An Interpretation (Canto)

Aztecs : An Interpretation (Canto)

List Price: $19.00
Your Price: $19.00
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: To understand the Aztec Civilization
Review: A lot of books are available about Precolumbian civilizations, especially mesoamerican; Aztecs and Mayas are the most learned of all. BUT, we read always the same informations for a long time. Inga CLENDINNEN gives us "An Interpretation" : what kind of civilization has rizen on the plateau of Mexico-Tenochtitlan ? How to explain Aztecs's power in a region where so many people had developped cities and values such as Olmecs (in TEOTIHUACAN) or Toltecs (in TULA) ? We discover first the City and its meaning. Then, we enter the mentality of the peoples who entertain LIFE by their Death (the Victims), their Work (Warriors, Priests, Merchant) or their personal place in the society (Males, Wives, Mothers). Third, we enter the Sacred and we begin to understand how the Rituals may consolidate the society with the Fear of others... before being the plea of a revolt of vassal populations. AZTECS were strong by their military organization but weak by their believes : an entire world fearing the sun could not been able to born another day, organizing war to provide their temples with victims to their Gods, such a world had to find its limits. When the Spaniards came with their "magic"... Aztecs resist, but only two years. The Death of the Empire is to find in its structures self. The same, with other contexts, explains the fall of the Ancient Indian Worlds, facing the Spaniards, the French or the Englishmen. Understanding how to be strong meant to become weak, for Native Americans old civilizations, may permit the Renaissance of New Indian worlds; but here, I go beyond the Interpretation of the Author. The Book tells us how to enter in Aztecs Civilization Construction, as we visit an Architecture, a Mecanism... Thanks to Inga CLENDINNEN for this initiation (please, excuse the bad english of a natural french writer).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: a handy overview
Review: I found this a readable and scholarly outline of Aztec culture from the point of view (so far as we can recover it) of the Aztecs themselves. The focus is on what they thought and felt and how they lived. (De Winter's review below gives a description of the book's topic layout.)

The title refers to Aztecs, but the author calls them Mexica (pronounced meh-SHEE-kah) throughout because it's what they called themselves.

Especially appreciated are her reminders that we tend to see in conquered peoples what we want to see, and that many accounts of this people were written by Spanish colonizers.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: a handy overview
Review: I found this a readable and scholarly outline of Aztec culture from the point of view (so far as we can recover it) of the Aztecs themselves. The focus is on what they thought and felt and how they lived. (De Winter's review below gives a description of the book's topic layout.)

The title refers to Aztecs, but the author calls them Mexica (pronounced meh-SHEE-kah) throughout because it's what they called themselves.

Especially appreciated are her reminders that we tend to see in conquered peoples what we want to see, and that many accounts of this people were written by Spanish colonizers.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A definitive study
Review: Inga Clendinnen has written a definitive guide to the Aztecs that attempts to view this somewhat enigmatic peoples in a manner that doesn't attempt to classify the ritualistic society that emerged from the Mexica Empire, but rather understand the roles of each social strata within the microcosm. There is an inevitable tendency to look at the religious perspective, focusing acutely on the human sacrifice and also on the Spanish conquest but the author shifts away (whilst having an opinion on the role of the victim) from these well-trodden paths to discussing the greater mores and individual experiences of the society.
There is an extremely interesting chapter discussing the roles of wives, in particular the ascribing of fertility and maternal aspects and the circumscribing of any 'political' role. This, in turn, leads to a further discussion on the role of the mother and the 'growing' eidetism that permeates cultural perception.
The text concludes with a brief chapter on the final destruction of Tenochitlan rounding off a work that brilliantly analyses Aztec ceremony and the individual's place within this society at the end of an Empire.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates