Brutality and Benevolence: Human Ethology, Culture, and the Birth of Mexico
By (Author) Abel A. Alves
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Anthropology
Cultural studies
972.01
Hardback
264
The 16th-century conquest of Mexico and its effects are best understood as cultural manifestations of animal behavior patterns which humans share with other primates. While Nahuas and Spaniards can be distinguished on the basis of learned cultural differences, such differences only exaggerated particular expressions of the universal behavioral patterns they shared. Brutality and benevolence were used in the same way by both to establish hierarchy and cultural bonding. After the conquest, a new Mexican synthesis could be constructed because of these commonalities. Alves explores the formation of that synthesis by examining such aspects of material culture as food, clothing, and shelterespecially as they manifest such universal primate tendencies as hierarchy, reciprocity, benevolence, brutality, xenophobia, curiosity, and territoriality. Alves proposes that humans are historically best understood by using current advances in the fields of primatology and ethology. This groundbreaking book will be of great interest to Latin Americanists, historians, and anthropologists.
ABEL A. ALVES is an Assistant Professor of History at Ball State University. His earlier writings have appeared in The Sixteenth Century Journal, CLIO, and in the book Coded Encounters.