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| Davíd Carrasco is the Neil L. Rudenstine Professor for the Study of Latin America at Harvard Divinity School and director of the Moses Mesoamerican Archive and Research Project. |
“It’s better than a Dead Sea scroll,” says Davíd Carrasco, about the maps detailed in his 2007 book Cave, City, and Eagle’s Nest.
Carrasco, a Neil L. Rudenstine Professor for the Study of Latin
America at Harvard Divinity School and director of the Moses
Mesoamerican Archive and Research Project, is Metro State’s 2008
Richard T. Castro Distinguished Visiting Professor.
In this role, he will participate in three days of community events,
including two free public lectures on Monday, April 21, 2:30-3:45 p.m.
and 6:30- 9 p.m. in the Tivoli Turnhalle. Carrasco will read from Cave, City, and Eagle’s Nest,
the 479-page book he co-edited with Scott Sessions, who is managing
editor of the African-American Religion Documentary History Project and
research associate at Amherst College.
The book is the culmination of an international research project and
a series of conferences organized by the Moses Mesoamerican Archive and
focused on the 16th-century pictorial manuscript known as the Mapa de
Cuauhtinchan No. 2. Over a five-year period 15 researchers studied the
details of the map, which is painted on bark paper and measures 109 by
204 centimeters. This extraordinary document contains more than 700
images and symbols relating the story of the emergence of Native
American ancestors at Chicomoztoc, their migration to the sacred city
of Cholulua, their foundation and settlement of Cuauhtinchan, their
community’s history and claim over the surrounding landscape, and many
other occurrences along the way.
It’s the latest project from Carrasco, who has directed a series of
research projects and symposia and has assisted in the organization of
several major museum exhibitions including the Denver Museum of Natural
History’s “Aztec: The World of Montezuma” (September 1992 – February
1993) visited by more than 800,000 people.
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| Carrasco received the Mexican Order of the Aztec Eagle, the highest honor the Mexican government gives to a foreign national, for his research work. |
Castro’s legacy
Carrasco’s
scholarly work builds on the legacy of Richard T. Castro (1946-1991),
an educational and civil rights activist who was one of Colorado’s true
champions of disenfranchised communities. A bust sits in the rotunda of
the state capitol commemorating the Metro State alumnus and former
member of the Colorado House of Representatives.
Initiated in Castro’s honor in 1997 to foster multiculturalism,
diversity and academic excellence at Metro State, the professorship
brings renowned Latina and Latino scholars, artists and leaders of
distinction to Metro State to conduct classes, seminars, performances
and lectures for students, faculty and the larger Denver community.
“This book makes Americana know Aztlan , the land, existed,” says
Associate Professor Angelina De la Torre, who is chair of the Castro
Distinguished Visiting Professorship Committee. “This is cutting-edge
scholarly work in Chicano studies because it established our homeland
in black and white and acknowledges our indigenous roots.”
In Chicano folklore, Aztlan is often appropriated as the name for
that portion of Mexico that was taken over by the U.S. after the
Mexican-American War of 1846, on the belief that this greater area
represents the point of parting of the Aztec migrations.
“Metro State is inaugurating this publication and it has
significance to the people of Colorado,” says Carrasco, a former
professor at University of Colorado and Princeton University. “It’s an
indigenous Mexican odyssey. Metro State is sharing it with the city of
Denver.”
According to Carrasco, the book offers answers to those trying to
understand where they fit in with the traditional history of the U.S.
“They (Chicanos) are often excluded from the East-West national story,
including historical moves as the Louisiana Purchase,” says Carrasco.
“Colorado is part of the North-South story.”
The book helps to complete the story, says De La Torre. “It’s full
circle for us – created as mythology – now a reality in the Western
World.”
The experience of researching these maps also brought things full
circle for Carrasco, who received the Mexican Order of the Aztec Eagle,
the highest honor the Mexican government gives to a foreign national.
While receiving the award, Carrasco says he was thinking about his
grandmother who lived in the bottom of Copper Canyon in Mexico during
the Mexican Revolution.
“Here I was, now at Harvard University, thinking about my roots….though I was a foreign national.”
For more information about the Castro Professorship and Carrasco’s appearances, please visit http://www.mscd.edu/news/castro/ or call 303-556-4619.