Sunday, February 28, 2010

Nahuatl Wills

The writings on Nahuatl Last Will and Testaments are very interesting in that they are a very foreign to the Nahuatl people but were brought by the Spaniards into the New World all the same, however the Nahuatl take on this new idea and bend it to their will and use it in order to continue their ways of life. like the town councils, which were merely a renaming of the city elders and chiefs, the people wrote, or had written for them by notaries, Last Wills and Testaments, but they are molding these specifically Spanish imports. The Nahuatl used the Spanish form of passing things onto those left behind after one died in order to perpetuate their own beliefs, such as the dichotomy of what belonged to women and the importance of social roles in Nahuatl society. For example they Nahuatl women perpetuated the women's role in society even in the items they left their daughters after they passed on, such as combs or cookware, which perpetuated the pre-conquest ideals of women at the home and hearth and men as protectors and warriors. it also further proves that women were not as helpless and non-entities as much of history or a Man's world would have individuals believe. the Nahuatl women not only held property but also passed it onto their heirs as a women or man of today's culture might do. they passed on what they believed their heirs would need most to help them live happily and successfully.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Spanish Marriage

The institute of marriage is one which is highly contested in modern culture, mainly the situation of who may marry, but no one outside of the church raises the question of whom may get divorced. in the 15th to the 17th Centuries the issue of divorce was a hot topic. in the 15th to 17th Centuries marriage was a sacred and inseparable bond that no one could break save God. to put aside a marriage by divorce was not only incredibly hard it was considered a sin, and in a culture largely governed by the church and religious practice, this was more important than law. in Spain however, there were numerous laws governing what situations allowed a divorce, such as the inability to have children, or if it could be proven the marriage was forced. a forced marriage could be nullified based on the fact that it was not a true holy marriage in the eyes of God because it was not take willingly. it would be difficult to prove a marriage was taken unwillingly if the victim had less witnesses than their souse or more feasibly none at all. the law did have a way out even for this however because divorce was allowed should one of the spouses choose to enter religious service in a monastery or convent. so even if a woman had no way of proving her marriage had been forced upon her she could instead take up the lesser of two solitudes by entering a nunnery. a life in the service of God, even if it was not the individuals first choice, would be far better than the prison of a forced marriage. the case of breaking a marriage went both ways however the laws did not work only for unhappy women but their were laws which protected women from adulterous and conniving men who would try to leave them after having had their way with the woman. a man who would attempt to cheat marriage by seducing the woman with promises of marriage to get her into bed and then leave would more than likely find themselves before a judge much like a man who fathered a child in today's culture would if he tried to ditch the child and mother. unlike todays culture however instead of paying continual child support payments the man would pay a single settlement for his misdeed of either betraying his spouse or drastically changing a woman's life after having seduced her. the Spain of the 15th and 17th Centuries differed from other countries in that it did provide laws for divorce, a way out if the couple was not happy.

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Slavery

The look into slave culture in Africa was incredibly interesting. living in America my view of slavery has generally been Caucasians oppressively and generally violently lording over Africans and African-Americans. the look at how in Africa slaves were the way to prosperity rather than land really busts the view of the vile Europeans and Americans raping of Africa. Africans practiced slavery as a means to progress forward economically. They actively participated in the slave trade and their own inner slave trade. the difference between the African slave trade and the triangle trade was treatment and means. the Triangle Trade allowed Europeans to further their goals on the land they controlled whereas with the African Trade the slaves were the commodity. Europeans treated the slaves like cargo, packed into tight cramped spaces with little food where many died. Africans treated their slaves with care because if one died they would lose wealth and standing, whereas Europeans would just buy a new slave to take the place of the lost labor. the Lane article was interesting in that it discussed how roles of slaves were gendered to man's work and woman's such as field work or as a blacksmith's apprentice and house work or selling wares in the market. the naming 'ceremony' was quite interesting where it de-africanized the slaves and attempted to strip them of their past by giving them new names that were vastly foreign to them and forced them into christian context.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Week 3

I found parts of this weeks readings to be somewhat dull. the speeches seemed very formalized and rigid. It sounded scripted if not coming from brainwashed robots. the enormous amount of pomp and fluff involved seems to a modern listener quite overdone. As of yet i see no reason to have to go on and on about how we are unworthy and may God have blessed your unworthy soul with a temporary health and oh yeah hello. Many who believe in Christ and God understand they are not worthy of his grace and that this life is fleeting, therefore health not a constant. the need to express this in greeting seems not only annoying but depressing also. Yes thanks for reminding me i am a sinner and that i am worthless, seems counterproductive really. The numerous addresses at a wedding also seem ridiculous. Granted at weddings the best friend and the elder say a few words to the bride and groom but the words chosen for the text, as said at each wedding, was overdone, and highly depressing for such a happy occasion. the elder greeting the groom/parents stating that this is good and may your son not shame you or bring ill on the family by his evil ways. seems like the speeches that were given could really kill the festive mood. the introduction of the Christian God into the Amerindian culture really formalizes the most simple of meetings: running into your mother/mother-in-law on the way to the market. all the extra words are unnecessary. maybe with more time to look at the formalized speech patterns the reason for this phenomena will become clearer but at the moment im still missing it