"Anohebasisiro Nimanibota / We Want to Talk to the Honored One": Timucua Language and its Uses, Silences, and Protests

Alejandra Dubcovsky, G. Broadwell
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Abstract

Abstract:In 1688, five Timucua Native chiefs wrote a brief letter welcoming the new Spanish governor to La Florida, or so the accompanying Spanish translation of the letter suggests. The original Timucua words tell another story. Combining two methodologies, linguistic anthropology and history, we seek to offer more than a new translation of a neglected seventeenth-century Native-language text. First, we examine the ways in which the Timucua letter-writers used their language. We show the select grammatical and rhetorical strategies Timucua writers used to make arguments, communicate displeasure, and express themselves by comparing the 1688 epistle with the only other surviving Timucua letter, written in 1651. Second, we ground the letter in its historical context. Placing the 1688 Timucua epistle alongside other letters and dispatches from the time, we explore the different ways Timucua people made sense of the violence and disruptions affecting their homelands. Centering Timucua words and experiences shows the limits of colonial control and, more importantly, the powerful possibilities afforded by working with Native language texts.
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“anhebasisiro Nimanibota /我们想与尊者交谈”:提木瓜语及其使用、沉默和抗议
摘要:1688年,五位蒂木瓜土著酋长写了一封简短的信,欢迎西班牙新任总督来到拉佛罗里达,这封信的西班牙语翻译是这么说的。原始的提木瓜语讲述了另一个故事。结合两种方法,语言人类学和历史,我们寻求提供超过一个被忽视的17世纪的母语文本的新翻译。首先,我们研究了提木瓜书信作者使用他们语言的方式。我们通过比较1688年的这封书信和1651年的另一封现存的铁木瓜书信,展示了铁木瓜作家用来进行争论、表达不满和表达自己的语法和修辞策略。其次,我们把这封信放在它的历史背景中。我们将1688年的铁木瓜书信与当时的其他信件和快件放在一起,探索铁木瓜人如何理解影响他们家园的暴力和破坏。以提木瓜人的文字和经历为中心,显示了殖民控制的局限性,更重要的是,与土著语言文本合作所提供的强大可能性。
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