From Christopher Columbus to "first anthropologist"
Friar Bernardino de Sahagun, fifteenth- and
sixteenth-century explorers, conquistadors, clerics,
scientists, and travelers wrote about the "Indian"
dances they encountered throughout the New World. This
was especially true of Spanish missionaries who
intensively studied and documented native dances in an
attempt to identify and eradicate the "idolatrous"
behaviours of the Aztec, the largest indigenous empire
in Mesoamerica at the time of its European discovery.
Dancing the New World traces the transformation of the
Aztec empire into a Spanish colony through written and
visual representations of dance in colonial discourse -
the vast constellation of chronicles, histories,
letters, and travel books by Europeans in and about the
New World. Scolieri analyzes how the chroniclers used
the Indian dancing body to represent their own
experiences of wonder and terror in the New World, as
well as to justify, lament, and/or deny their role in
its political, spiritual, and physical conquest. He also
reveals that Spaniards and Aztecs shared an
understanding that dance played an important role in the
formation, maintenance, and representation of imperial
power, and describes how Spaniards compelled Indians to
perform dances that dramatized their own conquest,
thereby transforming them into colonial subjects.
Scolieri's pathfinding analysis of the vast colonial
"dance archive" conclusively demonstrates that dance
played a crucial role in one of the defining moments in
modern history - the European colonization of the
Americas.
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