Full Description
The second in a two-volume series, Moquis and Kastiilam, Volume II, 1680-1781 continues the story of the encounter between the Hopis, who the Spaniards called Moquis, and the Spaniards, who the Hopis called Kastiilam, from the Pueblo Revolt in 1680 through the Spanish expeditions in search of a land route to Alta California until about 1781. By comparing and contrasting Spanish documents with Hopi oral tradition, the editors present a balanced presentation of a shared past. Translations of sixteenth-, seventeenth-, and eighteenth-century documents written by Spanish explorers, colonial officials, and Franciscan missionaries tell the perspectives of the European visitors, and oral traditions recounted by Hopi elders reveal the Indigenous experience.
The editors argue that only the Hopi perspective can balance the story recounted in the Spanish documentary record, which is biased, distorted, and incomplete (as is the documentary record of any European or Euro-American colonial power). The only hope of correcting those weaknesses and the enormous silences about the Hopi responses to Spanish missionization and colonization is to record and analyze Hopi oral traditions, which have been passed down from generation to generation since 1540, and to give voice to Hopi values and social memories of what was a traumatic period in their past.
Volume I documented Spanish abuses during missionization, which the editors address specifically and directly as the sexual exploitation of Hopi women, suppression of Hopi ceremonies, and forced labor of Hopi men and women. These abuses drove Hopis to the breaking point, inspiring a Hopi revitalization that led them to participate in the Pueblo Revolt and to rebuff all subsequent efforts to reestablish Franciscan missions and Spanish control. Volume II portrays the Hopi struggle to remain independent at its most effective - a mixture of diplomacy, negotiation, evasion, and armed resistance. Nonetheless, the abuses of Franciscan missionaries, the bloodshed of the Pueblo Revolt, and the subsequent destruction of the Hopi community of Awat'ovi on Antelope Mesa remain historical traumas that still wound Hopi society today.
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Oral Traditions, Collaborative Research, and Hopi History
III. The Pueblo Revolt
IV. The Reconquista of Nuevo MÉxico and the Destruction of Awat'ovi
V. Tewa-Tano Settlers on First Mesa
VI. Rebuffing the Spaniards
VII. Jesuits versus Franciscans and the Hopi Missions
VIII. The Resettlement of Pueblo Refugees in the 1740s
IX. Trails to California
Appendix 1. Hopi and Tewa Consultants
Appendix 2. University of Arizona Staff and Graduate Student Researchers
Notes
Glossary
References
Index
-
- 電子書籍
- 公女殿下の参謀様~『厄災の皇子』と呼ば…
-
- 電子書籍
- 今日も拒まれてます~セックスレス・ハラ…
-
- 電子書籍
- Mac Fan 2021年10月号 M…
-
- 電子書籍
- 大人のキレイのつくり方 - しなやかに…