“以(上帝)父之名”:早期殖民时期危地马拉的洗礼命名

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERARY REVIEWS REVIEW-LITERATURE AND ARTS OF THE AMERICAS Pub Date : 2023-04-01 DOI:10.1017/tam.2022.95
Mallory E. Matsumoto
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文考察了16世纪危地马拉的洗礼命名,背景是土著居民适应西班牙领导的入侵、强制重新安置和天主教的强加所带来的社会政治动荡。作为洗礼制度的一部分——第一个天主教的圣礼,也是传教士到达西班牙美洲后不久实施的——土著受洗者得到了一个欧洲名字,以及以教父母的形式出现的精神亲属。16世纪末和17世纪初圣地亚哥Atitlán(危地马拉高地的一个主要的Tz'utujil玛雅社区)的洗礼名字分布表明,土著的洗礼标志着与前殖民时期的专属习俗的决裂。圣地亚哥Atitlán地区的玛雅成年人没有继续按照出生日期给孩子起名的土著传统,而是制定了新的起名策略,同时将他们的孩子安置在西班牙的行政范围内,并在殖民破坏之后重建了当地的社会网络。此外,教父母对名字选择的影响既表达又加强了教父母作为殖民地土著社会中最突出的天主教社会制度的日益重要的意义,并且至今仍然充满活力。
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“In the Name of the (God)Father”: Baptismal Naming in Early Colonial Guatemala
Abstract This article examines baptismal naming in sixteenth-century Guatemala in the context of Indigenous adaptation to the sociopolitical upheavals of Spanish-led invasion, forced resettlement, and the imposition of Catholicism. As part of the institution of baptism—the first Catholic sacrament and one that missionaries implemented soon after their arrival in the Spanish Americas—Indigenous baptizees received a European name, as well as spiritual kin in the form of godparents. The distribution of baptismal names in late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century Santiago Atitlán, a predominantly Tz'utujil Maya community in highland Guatemala, suggests that Indigenous christening marked a break with precolonial onomastic practice. Instead of continuing the Indigenous tradition of naming children according to their birthdate, Maya adults in the Santiago Atitlán area developed new naming strategies that simultaneously located their children in the Spanish administrative sphere and reconstituted local social networks in the wake of colonial disruptions. Furthermore, the influence of godparents on name selection both expressed and reinforced godparenthood's rising significance as the most socially salient Catholic institution in colonial Indigenous society and one that remains vibrant into the present.
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来源期刊
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0.10
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0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Founded in 1968, Review is the major forum in the United States for contemporary Latin American and Caribbean writing in English and English translation; it also covers Canadian writing and the visual and performing arts in the Americas. Review is published by Routledge. in association with the Americas Society, a national, not-for-profit institution that promotes understanding in the United States of the political, economic, and cultural issues that define and challenge the Americas today.
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