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Cover for 9780292760882 Cover for 9781477309865 Cover for 9780521400930 Cover for 9780521446952 Cover for 9780521485852 Cover for 9781107693562 Cover for 9781478607403
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Following their first contact in 1519, accounts of Aztecs identifying Spaniards as gods proliferated. But what exactly did the Aztecs mean by a "god" (teotl), and how could human beings become gods or take on godlike properties? This sophisticated, interdisciplinary study analyzes three concepts that are foundational to Aztec religion—teotl (god), teixiptla (localized embodiment of a god), and tlaquimilolli (sacred bundles containing precious objects)—to shed new light on the Aztec understanding of how spiritual beings take on form and agency in the material world.In The Fate of Earthly Things, Molly Bassett draws on ethnographic fieldwork, linguistic analyses, visual culture, and ritual studies to explore what ritual practices such as human sacrifice and the manufacture of deity embodiments (including humans who became gods), material effigies, and sacred bundles meant to the Aztecs. She analyzes the Aztec belief that wearing the flayed skin of a sacrificial victim during a sacred rite could transform a priest into an embodiment of a god or goddess, as well as how figurines and sacred bundles could become localized embodiments of gods. Without arguing for unbroken continuity between the Aztecs and modern speakers of Nahuatl, Bassett also describes contemporary rituals in which indigenous Mexicans who preserve costumbres (traditions) incorporate totiotzin (gods) made from paper into their daily lives. This research allows us to understand a religious imagination that found life in death and believed that deity embodiments became animate through the ritual binding of blood, skin, and bone.

Hardcover:

9780292760882 | Univ of Texas Pr, January 30, 2015, cover price $60.00 | About this edition: Following their first contact in 1519, accounts of Aztecs identifying Spaniards as gods proliferated.

Paperback:

9781477309865 | Univ of Texas Pr, November 1, 2015, cover price $27.95

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Inga Clendinnen creates a vivid and dramatic picture of life in the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan, once the nerve centre of the Aztec tribute empire. She explores the worlds of Aztec women, of priests and of warriors, in an extraordinary recreation of everyday life in the city. Contrasting the beauty and sophistication of Aztec culture with the savagery of human sacrifice, she attempts to explain the philosophy, rituals, and social structures that underpinned this remarkable empire.

Hardcover:

9780521400930 | Cambridge Univ Pr, September 1, 1991, cover price $52.99 | About this edition: Inga Clendinnen creates a vivid and dramatic picture of life in the Aztec city of Tenochtitlan, once the nerve centre of the Aztec tribute empire.

Paperback:

9781107693562 | Reissue edition (Cambridge Univ Pr, July 28, 2014), cover price $19.99
9780521485852 | Reprint edition (Cambridge Univ Pr, April 1, 1995), cover price $30.99
9780521446952 | Cambridge Univ Pr, January 29, 1993, cover price $17.95

cover image for 9781478607403

Paperback:

9781478607403 | 2 edition (Waveland Pr Inc, August 13, 2013), cover price $25.95

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