A Companion to Latin American Literature and Culture. Группа авторов. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

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the Alva Ixtlilxochitl family and Jesuit collections were also accessible to the criollo intellectuals Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz and Don Carlos de Sigüenza y Góngora. Sometime between 1680 and 1690, the Alva Ixtlilxochitl archive was donated to Sigüenza y Góngora (Schwaller 1994, 397). This collection, which ended up in the Jesuit convent of San Pedro y San Pablo at Sigüenza’s death, was catalogued in the mid-eighteenth century by the Italian Lorenzo Boturini Benaducci. This archive continued to be studied by Jesuits and criollo seculars during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, and has been associated with the emergence of a Mexican historiography and national identity

      The last years of the seventeenth century close an era of historiography written by educated natives. Educated Indigenous people pragmatically used the alphabetic and legalistic Spanish system to their advantage but not without consequences. Some scholars have seen that in Peru and in New Spain, the reliance on a juridical system arbitrated by the colonial power created a dependency that weakened the natives’ capacity for self-determining confrontation, limiting resistance to lack of cooperation (Stern 1982, 311; Borah 1982, 284). Writing local histories at the end of the sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth centuries provided temporary solutions for continuing tradition and securing positions of high status, as was the case for Tezozomoc, Ixtlilxóchitl, and others. But once the generation of educated natives declined, the steady use of local histories as sources to appeal privileges or to authenticate territorial rights – as Indigenous communities do in the Títulos or Códices Techialoyan – continued to feed ethnic fragmentation and struggles among the natives. Conceivably, ethnic divisions weakened the possibilities of native communities’ unification for radical resistance.

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