Space, Place, and Mapping ILA387 Spring 2016Main MenuAnales de Tlatelolco (Anonymous, 1540-1560)Historia tolteca-chichimeca (Anales de Cuauhtinchan. Anonymous, 1550-1560)Anales de Cuauhtitlán (Anonymous, c. 1570)Codex Aubin (Anonymous, c. 1576)Anales de Tecamachalco (Anonymous, c. 1590)Clendinnen, I: “‘Fierce and Unnatural Cruelty’: Cortés and the Conquest of México"Secondary SourceLockhart, J: The Nahuas After the Conquest: A Social and Cultural History of the Indians of Central Mexico, Sixteenth Through Eighteenth CenturiesSecondary SourceLockhart, J.: We People Here. Nahuatl Accounts of the Conquest of MexicoSecondary SourceMcDonough, K.: The Learned Ones. Nahua Intellectuals in Postconquest MexicoSecondary SourceMcDonough, K.: “‘Love’ Lost: Class Struggle among Indigenous Nobles and Commoners of Seventeenth-Century Tlaxcala”Secondary SourceMegged, A. & Wood, S.: Mesoamerican Memory. Enduring Systems of RemembranceSecondary SourceRestall, M.: “The New Conquest History” in History Compass 10:12Secondary SourceSchroeder, S. (Ed): The Conquest All Over Again. Nahuas and Zapotecs Thinking, Writing, and Painting Spanish ColonialismSecondary SourceTownsend, C.: Here in This year. Seventeenth-Century Nahuatl Annals of the Tlaxcala-Puebla ValleySecondary SourceWood, S.: Transcending Conquest. Nahua Views of Spanish Colonial MexicoSecondary SourceKelly McDonougha6b175ff7fbe5e5898695a43d2f9a5602d0c5760
Barbara Mundy, chapter 1 from Mapping New Spain: Indigenous Cartography and the Maps of the Relaciones Geográficas
12016-01-20T20:20:59-08:00Kelly McDonougha6b175ff7fbe5e5898695a43d2f9a5602d0c5760701161/26plain2016-02-02T11:07:09-08:00Tania García-Piñadb5966f80a9feba274faea3a110c15dc4df105e8While Mundy’s approach to the production of maps in the Spanish empire centers on the figure of the king and his connection to territories near and far from him, she does so in order to exemplify the way man in 16th-century Europe positioned himself within the world. Through this view, for example, the maps serve as a way for Phillip II to legitimate his rule over the empire, especially in the New World territories. Her research questions explore why different/varied methods of representation were important in the 16th-century European context (i.e. chorographic vs. geographic maps), and how these translated into understanding space in New World from an Old World perspective. In order to answer her main questions, she examines two mapping commissions ordered by Phillip II and carried out by Anton van den Wyngaerde and Pedro de Esquivel. She identifies the distinct methods of representation used by the artists taking into account the broader historical and geographical context that would eventually influence the way the territories in the New Spain would be represented, as happened with the creation of the Relaciones Geograficas in New Spain. Mundy effectively help us understand the significance of mapping (along with the different methodologies of doing so) from a conceptual as well as a methodological point of view. Her analysis, as well as contextualization of the van den Wyngaerde and Esquivel maps offers a glimpse onto the conceptual frame that informed Europe’s initial understanding of the New World as part of the greater whole that was the Spanish empire. However, as she stresses the importance of the tangible nature of the lands (at least through maps), her visual examples are limited as she only provides an example of Esquivel’s work. It would have been very useful to compare it to the work of van den Wyngaerde (the distinction between choreographic and geographic maps remained unclear without a visual aid). Mundy's contribution lies in prompting us to think about different ways of engaging with space, and what that engagement signifies within a given context (i.e. for Phillip II, engaging his New World possessions through visual representations of the maps legitimized his status as king given that he could not physically rule overseas, thus he still has control over this space). “In both kinds of maps [van den Wyngaerde’s and Esquivel’s], man defines his relation to the world through his ability to measure it” (Mundy, 4)
12016-01-31T19:40:11-08:00Maria Victoria Fernandezb7ddf1da0116ba2a8c78410690d8b79f484ac28cSpaceMaria Victoria Fernandez1Spaceplain2016-01-31T19:40:11-08:00Maria Victoria Fernandezb7ddf1da0116ba2a8c78410690d8b79f484ac28c
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12016-01-25T22:35:09-08:00Tania García-Piñadb5966f80a9feba274faea3a110c15dc4df105e8Mundy, B. "Spain and the Imperial Ideology of Mapping" in The Mapping of New Spain: Indigenous Cartography and the Maps of the Relaciones Geográficas. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. 1996Tania García-Piña1plain2016-01-25T22:35:11-08:00While Mundy’s approach to the production of maps in the Spanish empire centers on the figure of the king and his connection to territories near and far from him, she does so in order to exemplify the way man in 16th-century Europe positioned himself within the world. Through this view, for example, the maps serve as a way for Phillip II to legitimate his rule over the empire, especially in the New World territories.
Her research questions explore why different/varied methods of representation were important in the 16th-century European context (i.e. choreographic vs. geographic maps), and how these translated into understanding space in New World from an Old World perspective.
In order to answer her main questions, she examines two mapping commissions ordered by Phillip II and carried out by Anton van den Wyngaerde and Pedro de Esquivel. She identifies the distinct methods of representation used by the artists taking into account the broader historical and geographical context that would eventually influence the way the territories in the New Spain would be represented, as happened with the creation of the Relaciones Geograficas in New Spain.
Mundy effectively help us understand the significance of mapping (along with the different methodologies of doing so) from a conceptual as well as a methodological point of view. Her analysis, as well as contextualization of the van den Wyngaerde and Esquivel maps offers a glimpse onto the conceptual frame that informed Europe’s initial understanding of the New World as part of the greater whole that was the Spanish empire. However, as she stresses the importance of the tangible nature of the lands (at least through maps), her visual examples are limited as she only provides an example of Esquivel’s work. It would have been very useful to compare it to the work of van den Wyngaerde (the distinction between choreographic and geographic maps remained unclear without a visual aid).
Mundy's contribution lies in prompting us to think about different ways of engaging with space, and what that engagement signifies within a given context (i.e. for Phillip II, engaging his New World possessions through visual representations of the maps legitimized his status as king given that he could not physically rule overseas, thus he still has control over this space).
“In both kinds of maps [van den Wyngaerde’s and Esquivel’s], man defines his relation to the world through his ability to measure it” (Mundy, 4)Tania García-Piñadb5966f80a9feba274faea3a110c15dc4df105e8
12020-02-11T04:58:52-08:00Sam Harveyd4c88ee35b1c49f1c9a8610709e97b4711dab3feSam HarveySam Harvey1plain2020-02-11T04:58:53-08:00Great Work I'm Also Looking forward to start my new architecture projectSam Harveyd4c88ee35b1c49f1c9a8610709e97b4711dab3fe