Skip to product information
1 of 1

Recovering Lost Footprints

Regular price £72.50
Sale price £72.50 Regular price £72.50
Sale Sold out
Analyzes contemporary Yucatecan and Chiapanecan Maya narratives.Recovering Lost Footprints, Volume 2 is an in-depth analysis of the sociohistorical conflict impacting Indigenous communities in Lati...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 01 December 2018
View Product Details

Analyzes contemporary Yucatecan and Chiapanecan Maya narratives.

Recovering Lost Footprints, Volume 2 is an in-depth analysis of the sociohistorical conflict impacting Indigenous communities in Latin America. Continuing the project he began in volume 1, Arturo Arias analyzes contemporary Peninsular and Chiapanecan Maya narratives. He examines the works of Yucatecan writers Jorge Cocom Pech, Javier Gómez Navarrete, Isaac Carrillo Can, and Marisol Ceh Moo. For Chiapas, Arias looks at the works of Tseltal novelist Diego Méndez Guzmán, Tsotsil short-story writer Nicolás Huet Bautista, and Tseltal narrative writer Josías López Gómez. Arias problematizes the nature of Western modernity and the crisis of Western models of development in the present. By way of his analysis, he suggests that we are facing a historical impasse because we have neglected native knowledges that offer alternative codes of ethics and beingness that emerge from Indigenous cosmovisions. The text skillfully contributes to and strengthens debates between US-centered and Latin American cultural studies theorists, as well as the hemispheric expansion of Native American and Indigenous Studies. Recovering Lost Footprints, Volume 2 is inspired more by the past as it impinges upon a continuing, constantly expanding present. Arias's reading of Maya literatures forces us to reconsider the space-time structure of Western thinking. Indeed, this book is intriguing precisely because it views literature from an Indigenous perspective, evidencing how that social space is full of multiple contrasting experiences and historical processes.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £72.50
Pages: 392
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Publication Date: 01 December 2018
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781438472591
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

"By drawing attention to the articulation between the contemporary literary production and its relationship to Mayan cosmovision in a broad sense, and focusing on the different traditions preserved through diverse languages and customs, this rich, comprehensive overview offers glimpses of a very different worldview." — Cynthia Margarita Tompkins, author of Affectual Erasure: Representations of Indigenous Peoples in Argentine Cinema

Acknowledgments
Introduction

Part I. Peninsular Mayas

1. How Peninsular Narrative Happened

2. Jorge Cocom Pech, Javier Gómez Navarrete, and Isaac Carrillo Can: Three Generations of Writers Reconfiguring Peninsular Maya Cosmovision

3. A Prolific Woman Novelist Takes Center Stage: Marisol Ceh Moo

Part II. Emerging Narratives in Chiapas

4. Chiapanecan Indigenous Writers Begin to Tell Stories

5. How It All Began in Chiapanecan Narrativities

6. Josías López Gómez: A Prolific Narrator

Conclusion

Notes
Works Cited
Index