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9781512828467 Academic Inspection Copy

Words Made Flesh

Language, Body, and Conversion in Colonial Latin America
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Examines the role of the body in Indigenous-language religious texts from colonial Latin America Words Made Flesh examines the role played by corporeality in a series of missionary linguistic and poetic projects from Brazil, Peru, and Mexico in early colonial Latin America. Caroline Egan analyzes how works produced in Indigenous languages for the purpose of evangelization were shaped by and, in turn, transformed native understandings of embodiment. Egan follows the trajectories of specific understudied words in the colonial corpus, tracing their usage through grammars, dictionaries, doctrinal translations, and hymns in Tupi, Quechua, and Nahuatl. These words, however, might not be the first to come to mind when thinking about missionary projects in the colonial world-such as God and trinity, heaven and hell, angel and demon. Instead, the book examines words like the Tupi iuka (to kill) and mano (to die); the Quechua sunqu (now often translated as "heart"); and the Nahuatl choca (to weep), cuica (to sing), and ihuinti (to get drunk). With complementary emphases on regional specificity and comparative ramifications, Words Made Flesh argues that the changing fortunes of these words speak to significant areas of dialogue and debate between Indigenous communities and missionary writers in the late sixteenth century.
Caroline Egan is Assistant Professor of Colonial Latin American Literature at Northwestern University.
"Words Made Flesh is refreshing and ambitious in its scope, examining across five languages authors who represent different geographical and historical moments in the Iberian Americas. The book provides an innovative, exciting approach that contributes to a turn in literary studies toward new ways in which texts can reflect on embodiment, whether through performance, biopolitics, or the sensorial."-- "Anna More, author of Baroque Sovereignty: Carlos de Sigueenza y Gongora and the Creole Archive of Colonial Mexico"
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