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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
51

¿Qué son las cosas de dios? no son nada = tramas e conflitos no processo inquisitorial contra o cacique de Texcoco (1539) / ¿Que son las cosas de Dioa? no son nada : plots and conflicts in the inquisitorial process against the cacique of Texcoco (1539)

Goulart , Saulo, 1984- 02 July 2012 (has links)
Orientador: Leandro Karnal / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciências Humanas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-19T20:33:56Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Goulart_Saulo_M.pdf: 847056 bytes, checksum: e8311d51418e1b1933383fef2547c125 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2012 / Resumo: Investiga-se de que maneira o caso de don Carlos Ometochtzin, cacique de Texcoco (Proceso Inquisitorial del Cacique de Tetzcoco 1539), se relacionou com os primeiros anos de conquista espanhola no Vale do México. O objetivo é olhar para os recortes suscitados pela leitura do processo, pois isso auxilia tanto a inteligibilidade do processo quanto o desvio do olhar em sentidos que apenas a fonte em particular pode fornecer. Do mesmo modo, está posta a tentativa de entender o processo enquanto acontecimento, já que se pergunta sobre o processo segundo suas regras de fabricação dentro da instituição inquisitorial, evocando suas conexões institucionais de forma mais direta. Para tanto, interroga-se como operaram os primeiros juízos inquisitoriais estabelecidos na Nova Espanha no período anterior ao ano de 1571 - data oficial do estabelecimento do Tribunal do Santo Ofício na Nova Espanha, mais especificamente no período de nomeação do primeiro arcebispo do México e inquisidor episcopal Juan de Zumárraga. Observa-se ainda, por meio do Processo Inquisitorial do cacique de Texcoco e demais fontes de pesquisa, aspectos do comportamento da antiga elite indígena do vale do México frente à imposição do cristianismo e à dominação política espanhola / Abstract: It investigates how the case of don Carlos Ometochtzin, cacique of Texcoco (Proceso Inquisitorial del Cacique de Tetzcoco 1539), was related to the early years of Spanish conquest in the Valley of Mexico. The goal is to look at the clippings raised by the reading process, establishing a two-way dialogue, because this can help the intelligibility of the process and averts the eyes in ways that only a particular source can provide. As the same manner, this work understands the process as an event, since it wonders about the process according to its manufacturing rules inside the inquisitorial institution, evoking its institutional connections more directly. For this, it asks how to operated the first inquisitorial courts established in New Spain in the period preceding the year of 1571 - official date of establishment of the Court of the Inquisition in New Spain, more specifically in the period of appointment of first archbishop of Mexico and inquisitor bishop Juan de Zumárraga. It can shows also, through the inquisitorial process of the chief of Texcoco and other research sources, aspects of the behavior of ancient indigenous elite of the valley of Mexico against the imposition of Christianity and political domination of Spain / Mestrado / Historia Cultural / Mestre em História
52

Spanish La Junta de los Rios: The institutional Hispanicization of an Indian community along New Spain's northern frontier, 1535-1821.

Folsom, Bradley 08 1900 (has links)
Throughout the colonial period, the Spanish attempted to Hispanicize the Indians along the northern frontier of New Spain. The conquistador, the missionary, the civilian settler, and the presidial soldier all took part in this effort. At La Junta de los Rios, a fertile area inhabited by both sedentary and semi-sedentary Indians, each of these institutions played a part in fundamentally changing the region and its occupants. This research, relying primarily on published Spanish source documents, sets the effort to Hispanicize La Junta in the broader sphere of Spain's frontier policy.
53

Pedro De Moctezuma and His Descendents (1521-1718)

Hollingsworth, Ann Prather 05 1900 (has links)
In 1521 a band of several hundred Spaniards overthrew the Aztec empire in Mexico and its ruler, Moctezuma II. This defeat in itself created a major cultural shock for the indigenious population, but the later arrival of Spanish officials and colonists constituted a far greater if less dramatic upheaval. For the victorious Spaniards rejected Aztec governmental institutions, considering them to be distinctly inferior, and quickly substituted their own. Moctezuma II and a substantial number of the Aztec ruling class had died during the violence which accompanied the conquest and those who remained were not permitted to exercise leadership. It was, however, the stated policy of the Spanish Crown that the Indian population of New Spain should be treated with kindness, allowed to retain their property, and led gently toward acceptance of the Christian faith. Among the surviving members of the Aztec nobility were several of the emperor's children, to whom Spanish authorities accorded special attention because of their unique position. Moctezuma II's son, Tlacahuepan, who on his conversion was baptized Pedro de Moctezuma, was one who received special grants and favors, for it was the Crown's intention that members of the emperor's family should be treated with consideration and be provided with the means to live in a fashion suitable to their aristocratic lineage. But during the years following the conquest, forces within the Spanish government and the Spanish and Indian communities came together to frustrate this purpose. Don Pedro and his descendents were very much aware of and prepared to exploit the unusual position their heritage gave them. They believed that the Crown had made promises to them of perpetual income and honors which were unfulfilled and they were prepared to continue their attempts to gain these prizes. The Crown rewarded their persistence with repeated orders to colonial authorities to pay the income owed, but frequently these commands were not answered. As Spanish income from New Spain declined and the quality of government in Spain and the colonies deteriorated, the possibilities that the Moctezuma family might prosper as earlier Spanish governments had decreed they should disappeared. And, at last, it became apparent that the essential inertia which permeated all levels of colonial administration combined with the chasm which existed between the edicts issued from Spain and their effective application in the New World were factors against which no one family could contend successfully.
54

The philosophy of Benito Juarez and its influence in the formation of his domestic policy and in his relations with the United States

Connolly, Ruth Marie. January 1963 (has links)
Call number: LD2668 .T4 1963 C75 / Master of Science
55

Structural change at Picuris Pueblo, New Mexico

Brown, Donald Nelson, 1937- January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
56

Reform process of the mathematics curriculum for basic education in Mexico during 1992-2000

Cambray-Nunez, Rodrigo January 2003 (has links)
There is no abstract available for this dissertation. / Department of Educational Leadership
57

Mexican Military Movements in the Texas Revolution

Flannery, 'Tina 01 1900 (has links)
"This thesis describes the art of logistics practiced by Santa-Anna and his staff in the marches from Northern Mexico to San Jacinto and Goliad, and the subsequent withdrawal. The method, or methods, employed to keep such an army in fighting condition are analyzed as it moved slowly and uncertainly across the desert and semi-desert areas, over burnt-out prairies and flooding rivers. To obtain the most complete picture of the Mexican army's movements and needs, the letters and diaries of the outstanding Mexican participants were used. Whenever possible American sources were studied to substantiate any seemingly questionable information in the Mexican accounts...As this thesis is primarily concerned with logistics, battles are not covered in detail. In cases where a conflict between American and Mexican sources exists concerning any phase of the Mexican military movements during the Texan revolution, both sides are presented, and an attempt made to evaluate them objectively." -- leaf x.
58

Decolonizing politics : Zapatista indigenous autonomy in an era of neoliberal governance and low intensity warfare / Zapatista indigenous autonomy in an era of neoliberal governance and low intensity warfare

Mora, Mariana 05 October 2012 (has links)
Grounded in the geographies of Chiapas, Mexico, the dissertation maps a cartography of Zapatista indigenous resistance practices and charts the production of decolonial political subjectivities in an era of neoliberal governance and low intensity conflict. It analyzes the relationship between local cultural political expressions of indigenous autonomy, global capitalist interests and neoliberal rationalities of government after more than decade of Zapatista struggle. Since 1996, Zapatista indigenous Mayan communities have engaged in the creation of alternative education, health, agricultural production, justice, and governing bodies as part of the daily practices of autonomy. The dissertation demonstrates that the practices of Zapatista indigenous autonomy reflect current shifts in neoliberal state governing logics, yet it is in this very terrain where key ruptures and destabilizing practices emerge. The dissertation focuses on the recolonization aspects of neoliberal rationalities of government in their particular Latin American post Cold War, post populist manifestations. I argue that in Mexico's indigenous regions, the shift towards the privatization of state social services, the decentralization of state governing techniques and the transformation of state social programs towards an emphasis on greater self-management occurs in a complex relationship to mechanisms of low intensity conflict. Their multiple articulations effect the reproduction of social and biological life in sites, which are themselves terrains of bio-political contention: racialized women's bodies and feminized domestic reproductive and care taking roles; the relationship between governing bodies and that governed; land reform as linked to governability and democracy; and the production of the indigenous subject in a multicultural era. In each of these arenas, the dissertation charts a decolonial cartography drawn by the following cultural political practices: the construction of genealogies of social memories of struggle, a governing relationship established through mandar obedeciendo, land redistribution through zapatista agrarian reform, pedagogical collective selfreflection in women’s collective work, and the formation of political identities of transformation. Finally, the dissertation discusses the possibilities and challenges for engaging in feminist decolonizing dialogic research, specifically by analyzing how Zapatista members critiqued the politics of fieldwork and adopted the genres of the testimony and the popular education inspired workshop as potential decolonizing methodologies. / text
59

Henry Lane Wilson, ambassador to Mexico, 1909 to 1913

MacDonough, John Edward, 1913- January 1941 (has links)
No description available.
60

Da idolatria indigena a conversão cristã no Mexico do seculo XVI : uma analise da obra do frei Toribio Motolinia

Reis, Anderson Roberti dos 01 October 2007 (has links)
Orientador: Leandro Karnal / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Instituto de Filosofia e Ciencias Humanas / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-07T19:49:01Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Reis_AndersonRobertidos_M.pdf: 1341397 bytes, checksum: 42ed53d0dd7ac84c01e702bab53989f1 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2007 / Resumo: O objetivo desta pesquisa é relacionar e analisar as concepções de idolatria indígena e conversão cristã no México do século XVI, a partir da Historia de los indios de la Nueva España de frei Toribio Motolinía. Após pouco mais de uma década de trabalhos missionários na Nova Espanha, Motolinía começou a redigir uma ¿relação dos ritos e idolatrias dos nativos e de sua maravilhosa conversão à religião cristã¿. Entretanto, essa ¿história dos índios¿ configurou-se, no decorrer da narrativa do frade, em uma ¿história dos trabalhos franciscanos junto aos indígenas do Novo Mundo¿. A partir dessa observação inicial, nós examinamos como Motolinía representou as noções de idolatria indígena e conversão cristã e, ao mesmo tempo, articulou esses dois conceitos em uma determinada estrutura narrativa com um sentido próprio. De algum modo, nós queremos analisar a relação entre a narrativa elaborada por frei Toribio e os desafios e debates (teológicos, políticos) com os quais o frade esteve envolvido, mesmo que indiretamente. A partir desse exercício, nós pretendemos, também, trazer ao debate uma parte significativa da história das idéias religiosas e políticas no México quinhentista, bem como as bases da fundação de uma memória franciscana na América / Abstract: The objective of this study is to relate and analyze the conceptions of indigenous idolatry and Christian conversion in the 16th century Mexico, based on the Historia de los indios de la Nueva España of friar Toribio Motolinía. After little more than a decade of missionary work in New Spain, Motolinía started to write a "register of rites and idolatry of the natives and their wonderful conversion to the Christian religion". However, this "indigenous history" became, as the friar's narrative progressed, a "history of Franciscan works with the natives of New World". From this initial observation, we explored how Motolinía represented the ideas of indigenous idolatry and Christian conversion and, at the same time, organized these two concepts in a given narrative structure, with a specific meaning. Somehow, we want to analyze the relationship between the narrative developed by friar Toribio and the challenges and debates (theological, political) with which he was involved ¿ indirectly, even. From this exercise, we also want to raise the debate about a significant part of the history of religious and political ideas of the 16th century Mexico, as well as the basis of the foundation of a Franciscan memory in America / Mestrado / Historia Cultural / Mestre em História

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