Methods and Approaches
Reading:

J. Lockhart, ‘Introduction: Background and Course of the New Philology’, in Sources and Methods for the Study of Postconquest Mesoamerican Ethnohistory, ed. J. Lockhart, L. Sousa, and S. Wood (2007), 1-24 [e-book available here: blogs.uoregon.edu/mesoinstitute/facultystaff/stephanie-wood-curriculum-vitae/sources-and-methods-for-the-study-of-postconquest-mesoamerican-ethnohistory].

J. Rabasa, Tell Me the Story of How I Conquered You: Elsewheres and Ethnosuicide in the Colonial Mesoamerican World (2011), ch. 1 (‘Overture’, pp. 1-17).

H. Langfur, ‘Introduction: Recovering Brazil’s Indigenous Pasts’, in Native Brazil: Beyond the Convert and the Cannibal, 1500-1900 (2016), 1-28.

J.A. Erbig jr and S. Latini, ‘Across Archival Limits: Colonial Records, Changing Ethnonyms, and Geographies of Knowledge’, Ethnohistory 66, no. 2 (2019): 249-273.
Date: 13 October 2023, 13:00 (Friday, 1st week, Michaelmas 2023)
Venue: Exeter College, Turl Street OX1 3DP
Venue Details: Staircase 8, Room 5
Speaker: Reading Group
Organising department: Faculty of History
Part of: Iberian History Reading Group
Booking required?: Not required
Audience: Members of the University only
Editor: Belinda Clark