Victors and Vanquished The history of the Western hemisphere is full of war and conquest. One of the most significant and defining of those conquests is the downfall of the Mexica/Aztec Empire. While there are many other events to choose from‚ this one stands out since it was one over one of the largest empires in Central America. It is also important to look at because of the immense cultural impact it had. The story of this takeover reads like a movie script‚ a small band of Spaniards single
Premium Mexico Aztec Mexico City
The Victors and Vanquished is a book that was edited by Stuart B. Schwartz in the year 2000. From reading the acknowledgements I gathered that Schwartz preparation with the book involved the help of his colleagues too. He even attended Yale University as a Professor and gave a seminar of the conquest of Mexico. However‚ Schwartz is not a researcher in Mexican ethnohistory‚ but a man whose goal is to spread new discoveries to people who enjoy culture’s past. The document that Schwartz presented the
Premium United States Psychology Latin America
through the memory of the conquerors or the conquered‚ and as a result there is a great disparity in the facts‚ those facts changing depending on which side produced the documents. We will take a look at several of the documents published in Victors and Vanquished from both the Spanish and Nahua perspectives‚ analyzing them for bias‚ lessons learned‚ as well as the different contrasts between different perspectives. In addition I think it is important to look at the overall motivation behind the Spanish
Premium Mexico Spanish colonization of the Americas Mexico City
First Book Essay-Quiz Stuart B. Schwartz‚ ed. Victors and Vanquished‚ Spanish and Nahua Views of the Conquest of Mexico. After the massacre at Cholula‚ Cortez and the Spanish‚ whose coming had been foretold in omens‚ and their Indian allies entered the city of Tenochtitlan and were ceremoniously met my Moctezuma‚ whom after a week they imprisoned. After slaughtering celebrants at the religious festival of Huitzilopochtli in the Sacred Patio‚ the Spanish were forced out of the city by a general
Premium Mexico Nahuatl Aztec
subjection of the indigenous peoples of the Americas. Upon reaching Central Mexico‚ Spanish explorers found themselves confronted with the Nahua people‚ commonly known as Aztecs‚ of whom the largest tribe was the Mexica. Stuart B. Schwartz’s Victors and Vanquished: Spanish and Nahua Views of the Conquest of Mexico contains opposing versions of the defeat and destruction of the flourishing sixteenth-century civilization of the Nahua. By presenting both indigenous and European sources in each chapter
Premium Europe Spain United States
curriculum‚ in teaching units and in textbooks‚ students often study historical events‚ concepts‚ and issues only or primarily from the point of view of victors. The perspectives of the vanquished are frequently silenced‚ ignored‚ or marginalized. This kind of teaching privileges mainstream students – those who most often identify with the victors or dominant social groups. (quoted in Shelly B-Jeffy & Jewell E. Cooper‚ 2011: 74).
Premium Education Teacher High school
Victor Hugo Many critics would go as far as to say that Victor Hugo was and remains the Charles Dickens of France. Hugo is most well known for the writing of the famous Broadway show and book Les Misérables as well as what became the Disney Hit Hunchback of Notre Dame. A brilliant author‚ artist‚ and poet‚ Hugo is most recognized for his writing of government and revolution. But these themes that are common for many authors to write of have actually deemed Hugo quite unique‚ so much so that critics
Premium Victor Hugo
such in light of the fact that they were under his run the show. On the off chance that Alexander the Great never vanquished these urban areas in the Near East‚ they most likely would’ve built up their own particular culture and religion without being under the lead of anybody. For instance‚ the U.S. got its way of life from England since they went to the U.S. furthermore‚ they vanquished our territories‚ so we began building up their dialect‚ their way of life‚ and their religion. Britain got the chance
Premium
to the book. The most evident change that jumps out at me is the portrayal of Dr. Victor Frankenstein. The common missing element in all of the film versions of the classic novel is the way they treat the character of Victor. The films all tend to downplay what a "monster" Victor is and instead stress how much of a monster the Creature is. The films seem to stress less on the responsibility and guilt that Victor feels over his creation‚ which is shown in the book. Instead of taking the stance
Premium Frankenstein
Man (Victor) vs. God Half-frozen‚ trembling‚ and troubled are all adjectives that could describe Victor Frankenstein when a ship captain by the name of Robert Walton rescued him in the middle of the Artic. From dialogue between the two‚ we are informed that Victor Frankenstein has spent his entire life trying to learn everything he could about science and medicine. However‚ Victor used his knowledge differently than his professors had intended for him to. Written in 1816‚ Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein
Free Mary Shelley Frankenstein Paradise Lost