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The Power of Death: Hierarchy in the Representation of Death in Pre- and Post-Conquest Aztec Codices
Author(s) -
Tanya Ball
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
multilingual discourses
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1929-1515
DOI - 10.29173/md22014
Subject(s) - iconography , conquest , afterlife , scholarship , sacrifice , syncretism (linguistics) , art , representation (politics) , power (physics) , serpent (symbolism) , history , ancient history , literature , art history , archaeology , philosophy , politics , law , linguistics , physics , quantum mechanics , political science
Through an examination of Aztec death iconography in pre- and post-Conquest codices of the central valley of Mexico (Borgia, Mendoza, Florentine, and Telleriano-Remensis), this paper will explore how attitudes towards the Aztec afterlife were linked to questions of hierarchical structure, ritual performance and the preservation of Aztec cosmovision. Particular attention will be paid to the representation of mummy bundles, sacrificial debt-payment and god-impersonator (ixiptla) sacrificial rituals. The scholarship of Alfredo López-Austin on Aztec world preservation through sacrifice will serve as a framework in this analysis of Aztec iconography on death. The transformation of pre-Hispanic traditions of representing death will be traced from these pre- to post-Conquest Mexican codices, in light of processes of guided syncretism as defined by Hugo G. Nutini and Diana Taylor’s work on the performative role that codices play in re-activating the past. These practices will help to reflect on the creation of the modern-day Mexican holiday of Día de los Muertos.  

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