Mexico's Literary History
[2023-04-10 04:15:10]
When most people think about Mexican culture, they think about food, music and clothes. These are the main aspects, but culture is also influenced by literature. The history of Mexican literature can be divided into various times and regions of colonial pre-colonial, colonial, satirical, independent, modern and contemporary. Each area has famous writers, works, prizes. First, Mexican literature dates back to the pre-colonial era. The earliest work of the Indians included sacred books written by Popol Vuh, Maya of Quiche, Guatemala.
Unconscious academic trends, interdisciplinary isolation, and nation-building stories can help to exclude local sounds in Mexican literature and culture history. For more than three decades, the country's historians have provided new perspectives to the work of indigenous intellectuals for the first centuries of the colonial era. However, after that, the indigenous peoples heard less and less. Did they gradually abandon thinking, talking, writing, poetry, abstraction, or philosophy after conquest? My paper covers Nawas, one of the most widely used and documented unique languages in Mexico, but he continues to work as an intellectual. However, as the needs of a particular community change, the roles, forums, tools, and discourse codes of the intellectuals and genres that they use also change.
The history of Mexico before Spain conquest was learned, in particular, by archaeologists, writers and national historians who analyzed the manuscripts of Central America (usually studied from the perspective of indigenous peoples). Aztec's Transcript, Maya's Transcript, and Mixtec's Transcript. Presence of Central Americans is thought to date back 40,000 years ago and is presumed to be an ancient footprint found in valleys in Mexico but this date is based on a further survey using radiocarbon dating It may become inaccurate later. It is unknown that the bonfire of 23,000 years ago found in the valley of Mexico is the earliest human bone discovered in Mexico to date.
Summary: The Mexican morning is a collection of eight articles written by literary heavyweight D.H. Lawrence, who lived in Mexico and New Mexico between 1924 and 1925. The main concern is the encounter with Lawrence and Oaxaca of India and his wife Freda (including his servant's Rosalino) of Taos and his thoughts on their consciousness and European and "white" consciousness It is the same as Lawrence. That said. Though considered to be the "New World", it is clear that Lawrence believes he is confronted with an ancient world that is incompatible with himself.