The Origins of Violence in Mexican Society
By (Author) Christina J. Johns
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th May 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History of the Americas
Social and cultural history
Economic history
Violence, intolerance and persecution in history
303.6097253
Hardback
240
The bloody, mass sacrifices of the Aztec empire have been documented and decried since the 16th century when the Spanish began using violence to justify their own domination of the Mesoamerican Indian population. Similarly, the violence of the Conquest, and the first years of the Spanish colonial occupation of Mexico, have been discussed and decried. However, researchers and scholars have discussed the violence of both societies only in descriptive terms, rarely attempting to offer explanations for the violence of the two periods. The unique feature of this analysis is a socioeconomic investigation of labor patterns, food production, trade, wealth, population, and environment, providing an explanatory framework for what otherwise appears as senseless and random violence. In this study, Johns analyzes the violence of Aztec and Conquest Mexico from a materialistic perspective.
CHRISTINA JACQUELINE JOHNS is Associate Professor of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminology at Eastern Michigan University. She is the author of Power Ideology and the War on Drugs (Praeger, 1992) and State Crime, the Media, and the Invasion of Panama (Praeger, 1993).