WATER, FIRE AND THE FEMININE IN THE PRE-HISPANIC WORLD: CREATION AND DESTRUCTION OF CULTURE
WATER, FIRE AND THE FEMININE IN THE PRE-HISPANIC WORLD: CREATION AND DESTRUCTION OF CULTURE
Author(s): Marco A. Jiménez García, Ana María Valle VázquezSubject(s): History, Gender Studies, Cultural history, Customs / Folklore, Ancient World, Cultural Anthropology / Ethnology, Culture and social structure
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: creation; destruction; pre-Hispanic world; eroticism; radical other; myths;
Summary/Abstract: The following text discusses the ideas of water, of fire and the feminine, essential elements in the pre-Hispanic world, as forces with the potential to create and destroy a culture. In The feminine in the pre-Hispanic World: Traces of eroticism and the radical other, we argue that the “horror” coming from the radical otherness within the erotic experience is the feminine. In American Atlantis: Mayan and Aztec catastrophes, we explain that myths reveal the creative work that is the basis of the cultural world. In Water and fire in the pre-Hispanic world, we declare that the acknowledgment of creation having its origin in water and fire is a foundational myth, universal to all societies.
Journal: Knowledge Cultures
- Issue Year: 6/2018
- Issue No: 02
- Page Range: 132-172
- Page Count: 41
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF