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Quetzalcoatl and Guadalupe The Formation of Mexican National Consciousness, 1531-1813

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ISBN-10: 0226467880

ISBN-13: 9780226467887

Edition: Reprint 

Authors: Jacques Lafaye, Benjamin Keen, Octavio Paz Lozano

List price: $30.00
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Description:

"In this study of complex beliefs in which Aztec religion and Spanish Catholicism blend, Lafaye demonstrates the importance of religious beliefs in the formation of the Mexican nation. Far from being of only parochial interest, this volume is of great value to any historian of religions concerned with problems of nativism and syncretism."--Franke J. Neumann, Religious Studies Review
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Book details

List price: $30.00
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Publication date: 8/15/1987
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 366
Size: 6.25" wide x 9.00" long x 0.75" tall
Weight: 1.034
Language: English

Octavio Paz's poetic roots are in romanticism and such neoromantics as D. H. Lawrence, but he has been profoundly influenced by Mexican Indian mythology and oriental religious philosophy, particularly Tantric Buddhism. The latter influence came about while he was serving as Mexico's ambassador to India (1962-68), when he resigned to protest the government's treatment of students demonstrating prior to the Olympic Games in Mexico City. He conceives of poetry as a way of transcending barriers of world, time, and individual self. Through poetry he seeks to achieve a state of innocence and an euphoria of the senses bordering on the mystical, and he expresses anguish when language fails him.…    

Foreword
Acknowledgments Chronology A
Historian's Profession of Faith
New Spain from the Conquest to Independence (1521-1821)
Brothers and Enemies: Spaniards and Creoles
Irreconcilable Enemies: Indians, Mestizos, Mulattoes
The Inquisition and the Pagan Underground
The Indian, a Spiritual Problem (1524-1648)
The Creole Utopia of the ""Indian Spring"" (1604-1700)
The Spiritual Emancipation (1728-1759)
The Holy War (1767-1821)
Quetzalc�atl, or the Phoeni