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Department of English Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works

Aztecs

Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Other Languages, Societies, and Cultures

Myth Of The Suns And The Toltec-Chichimec Origins Of The Mexica People: The Entire Leyenda De Los Soles, Willard Gingerich Jan 1992

Myth Of The Suns And The Toltec-Chichimec Origins Of The Mexica People: The Entire Leyenda De Los Soles, Willard Gingerich

Department of English Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works

This marvelous collection of sacred texts and images from pre-Columbian Central American culture is well presented and carefully introduced, providing a wealth of material on goddess images in village cultures and on the urban tradition with its creation and rulership myths. Authors Roberta Markman (comparative literature, California State, Long Beach) and Peter Markman (English, Fullerton) concentrate on the unfolding of these traditions, on their social and historical backgrounds, and on profundity as revealed in literary and visual texts. Essential for academic and museum libraries, recommended for seminary and public libraries.


Tlaloc, His Song, From The Florentine Codex, Willard Gingerich Jan 1992

Tlaloc, His Song, From The Florentine Codex, Willard Gingerich

Department of English Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works

This marvelous collection of sacred texts and images from pre-Columbian Central American culture is well presented and carefully introduced, providing a wealth of material on goddess images in village cultures and on the urban tradition with its creation and rulership myths. Authors Roberta Markman (comparative literature, California State, Long Beach) and Peter Markman (English, Fullerton) concentrate on the unfolding of these traditions, on their social and historical backgrounds, and on profundity as revealed in literary and visual texts. Essential for academic and museum libraries, recommended for seminary and public libraries.


Cihuacoatl, Her Song, From The Florentine Codex, Willard Gingerich Jan 1992

Cihuacoatl, Her Song, From The Florentine Codex, Willard Gingerich

Department of English Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works

This marvelous collection of sacred texts and images from pre-Columbian Central American culture is well presented and carefully introduced, providing a wealth of material on goddess images in village cultures and on the urban tradition with its creation and rulership myths. Authors Roberta Markman (comparative literature, California State, Long Beach) and Peter Markman (English, Fullerton) concentrate on the unfolding of these traditions, on their social and historical backgrounds, and on profundity as revealed in literary and visual texts. Essential for academic and museum libraries, recommended for seminary and public libraries.


Quetzalcoatl's Hero Journey, From The Anales De Cuauhtitlan, Willard Gingerich Jan 1992

Quetzalcoatl's Hero Journey, From The Anales De Cuauhtitlan, Willard Gingerich

Department of English Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works

This marvelous collection of sacred texts and images from pre-Columbian Central American culture is well presented and carefully introduced, providing a wealth of material on goddess images in village cultures and on the urban tradition with its creation and rulership myths. Authors Roberta Markman (comparative literature, California State, Long Beach) and Peter Markman (English, Fullerton) concentrate on the unfolding of these traditions, on their social and historical backgrounds, and on profundity as revealed in literary and visual texts. Essential for academic and museum libraries, recommended for seminary and public libraries.


Teteo Innan, Her Song, From The Florentine Codex, Willard Gingerich Jan 1992

Teteo Innan, Her Song, From The Florentine Codex, Willard Gingerich

Department of English Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works

This marvelous collection of sacred texts and images from pre-Columbian Central American culture is well presented and carefully introduced, providing a wealth of material on goddess images in village cultures and on the urban tradition with its creation and rulership myths. Authors Roberta Markman (comparative literature, California State, Long Beach) and Peter Markman (English, Fullerton) concentrate on the unfolding of these traditions, on their social and historical backgrounds, and on profundity as revealed in literary and visual texts. Essential for academic and museum libraries, recommended for seminary and public libraries.