The rabbit on the face of the moon : mythology in the mesoamerican tradition

書誌事項

The rabbit on the face of the moon : mythology in the mesoamerican tradition

Alfredo López-Austin ; translated by Bernard R. Ortiz de Montellano and Thelma Ortiz de Montellano

University of Utah Press, c1996

  • : pbk

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注記

A collection of essays that originally appeared in various issued of México ingígena and Ojarascas

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Eighteen essays provide an accessible, entertaining look into a system of millennia-old legends and beliefs. Mythology is one of the great creations of humankind. It forms the core of sacred books and reflects the deepest preoccupations of human beings, their most intimate secrets, their glories, and their infamies. In 1990, Alfredo LOpez Austin, one of the foremost scholars of ancient Mesoamerican thought, began a series of essays about mythology in the Mesoamerican tradition, published in MExico IndIgena. Although his articles were written for general readers, they were also intended to engage specialists. They span a divers subject matter: myths and names, eclipses, stars, left and right, MExican origins, Aztec incantations, animals, and the incorporation of Christian elements into the living mythologies of Mexico. The title essay relates the Mesoamerican myth explaining why there is a rabbit o the moon's face to a Buddhist image and suggests the importance of the profound mythical concepts presented by each image. The eighteen essays in this volume are unified by their basis in Mesoamerican tradition and provide an accessible, entertaining look into a system of millennia-old legends and beliefs.

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