Canciones que parten el corazón: El sacrificio en el corrido de la Revolución

This study reviews relevant aspects of the culture and religion of Mesoamerica before the arrival of Europeans. These pre-Hispanic elements appear as models of trends and mentalities of the Mexico of the Mexican Revolution, mostly through the corrido. Like Aztec society, Mexican society, reflected i...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Linda Egan
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
ES
Publicado: Prof. Dr. Vittoria Borsò, Prof. Dr. Frank Leinen, Jun.-Prof. Dr. Yasmin Temelli, Prof. Dr. Guido Rings 2013
Materias:
P
Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/943f27ba3a3d4452b377d9fac22168da
Etiquetas: Agregar Etiqueta
Sin Etiquetas, Sea el primero en etiquetar este registro!
id oai:doaj.org-article:943f27ba3a3d4452b377d9fac22168da
record_format dspace
spelling oai:doaj.org-article:943f27ba3a3d4452b377d9fac22168da2021-11-29T12:34:18ZCanciones que parten el corazón: El sacrificio en el corrido de la Revolución10.23692/imex.3.42193-9756https://doaj.org/article/943f27ba3a3d4452b377d9fac22168da2013-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.imex-revista.com/canciones-que-parten-el-corazon/https://doaj.org/toc/2193-9756This study reviews relevant aspects of the culture and religion of Mesoamerica before the arrival of Europeans. These pre-Hispanic elements appear as models of trends and mentalities of the Mexico of the Mexican Revolution, mostly through the corrido. Like Aztec society, Mexican society, reflected in its corridos, emphasizes the heart as the material and spiritual center of the body and by synecdochic extension, the nation. Both pre-Hispanic chant and corridos are full of allusions to the human heart and to sacrifice and self-sacrifice. The study provides abundant evidence of this imagery in the corrido, as well as in the traditional Aztec chant. The analysis highlights the sacrificial character of a Mexico that has not changed much, fundamentally, since the days when Mexico was Tenochtitlan.Linda EganProf. Dr. Vittoria Borsò, Prof. Dr. Frank Leinen, Jun.-Prof. Dr. Yasmin Temelli, Prof. Dr. Guido Ringsarticleheartcorridobodyprehispanic culturespiritsacrificeLanguage and LiteraturePENESiMex. México Interdisciplinario/Interdisciplinary Mexico, Vol 2, Iss 3, Pp 33-48 (2013)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
ES
topic heart
corrido
body
prehispanic culture
spirit
sacrifice
Language and Literature
P
spellingShingle heart
corrido
body
prehispanic culture
spirit
sacrifice
Language and Literature
P
Linda Egan
Canciones que parten el corazón: El sacrificio en el corrido de la Revolución
description This study reviews relevant aspects of the culture and religion of Mesoamerica before the arrival of Europeans. These pre-Hispanic elements appear as models of trends and mentalities of the Mexico of the Mexican Revolution, mostly through the corrido. Like Aztec society, Mexican society, reflected in its corridos, emphasizes the heart as the material and spiritual center of the body and by synecdochic extension, the nation. Both pre-Hispanic chant and corridos are full of allusions to the human heart and to sacrifice and self-sacrifice. The study provides abundant evidence of this imagery in the corrido, as well as in the traditional Aztec chant. The analysis highlights the sacrificial character of a Mexico that has not changed much, fundamentally, since the days when Mexico was Tenochtitlan.
format article
author Linda Egan
author_facet Linda Egan
author_sort Linda Egan
title Canciones que parten el corazón: El sacrificio en el corrido de la Revolución
title_short Canciones que parten el corazón: El sacrificio en el corrido de la Revolución
title_full Canciones que parten el corazón: El sacrificio en el corrido de la Revolución
title_fullStr Canciones que parten el corazón: El sacrificio en el corrido de la Revolución
title_full_unstemmed Canciones que parten el corazón: El sacrificio en el corrido de la Revolución
title_sort canciones que parten el corazón: el sacrificio en el corrido de la revolución
publisher Prof. Dr. Vittoria Borsò, Prof. Dr. Frank Leinen, Jun.-Prof. Dr. Yasmin Temelli, Prof. Dr. Guido Rings
publishDate 2013
url https://doaj.org/article/943f27ba3a3d4452b377d9fac22168da
work_keys_str_mv AT lindaegan cancionesquepartenelcorazonelsacrificioenelcorridodelarevolucion
_version_ 1718407359892553728