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  • Imperialism and the Origins of Mexican Culture by Colin MacLachlan
  • Susan Kellogg
Imperialism and the Origins of Mexican Culture. By Colin MacLachlan. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2015. Pp. 340. Notes. Bibliography. Index. $35 cloth. doi:10.1017/tam.2016.50

Focusing through the lens of imperialism, Colin MacLachlan, the John Christy Barr Distinguished Professor History at Tulane University, has written an ambitious account of the creation of mestizo culture in sixteenth-century New Spain. Examining imperial organization in four civilizations—Roman, Aztec, Spanish, and Islamic—he charts the formation of the hybrid polity, economy, and society of early colonial Mexico. The [End Page 277] book’s far-ranging core chapters consider governing structures, military organization, trade and commerce, and religious beliefs.

Even so, the book embodies a cultural evolutionary perspective that defines indigenous imperial practice as “lesser” in comparison to that of Rome or Spain. It gives greater weight to Spanish culture and imperial practice in the formation of mestizo culture in New Spain, even as the author balances deculturation versus cultural survival interpretations of indigenous Mesoamerican cultures.

The story of the rise of the Mexica and the Triple Alliance lies at the center of the book’s first chapter on Mesoamerican civilizations. MacLachlan argues that the Mexica and their capital city of Tenochtitlan constituted a “city-based chieftaincy” (p. 41), but in doing so deemphasizes the complexity of the dynastic history and political competition among the basin’s city-states, or altepetl. The chapter stresses what MacLachlan sees as the “grotesque” nature of Aztec religious practices, especially worship of their pantheon of deities, the evolution from a tribal political structure to that of a chieftaincy, and the expansive yet inflexible nature of the tributary empire over which the Mexica and their Tetzcoca and Tepaneca partners ruled.

The author observes the dynamism of central Mexico’s economy but gives short shrift to the vibrant literary and artistic traditions that characterized the region’s urban culture. Declaring the Triple Alliance exhausted and overextended, he relies on postconquest tales of omens of doom that make defeat by the Spanish appear inevitable—finding the purported irrationality of native beliefs more significant than disease—the role of Spanish-indigenous military alliances, or in other instances the introduction of new military techniques against which the Mexica’s response, weakened by the loss of crucial allies, could not prevail.

The next chapter introduces the theme of the emergence and structure of the Roman Empire as the base from which Spanish culture and imperialism developed. It contends that the emerging Roman Christianity, with its monotheism, could be only partially implemented among the polytheistic Iberian agrarian peasantry, whose interactions with Roman officials bore similarities to the way “Indo-Mexicans,” as the author calls them, would interact with Spanish officials centuries later. The spread of pandemic disease and famine opened the door to the Muslim movement into Iberia, displacing the Visigoths.

The book’s third chapter traces Iberian encounters with both Islam and Christianity. MacLachlan clearly describes Iberian Muslim political organization—especially the caliphate established in much of Iberia in 912—for Latin Americanists who may not have read as much world history as he has. The concept of “frontier” comes to the fore in MacLachlan’s analysis as he shows how the Castilian monarchy drew established and new Christian peasant communities into a religiously and economically fortified Castilian monarchy. The chapter ends with a discussion of the decline of religious tolerance, the emergence of ideas about limpieza de sangre, and the establishment of the Inquisition. The intense, inward-looking Catholicism of Castile that had developed by 1492 would shape that kingdom’s actions in the Americas. [End Page 278]

Situating his narrative of the conquest in a discussion of legal and moral issues, MacLachlan explores the establishment of governance in New Spain—also conceptualized as a frontier in which Cortés and other settlers, the crown, and missionaries vied for power and control over the wealth, labor, and souls of the indigenous population. In contrast to much ethnohistorical scholarship that emphasizes cultural survival and vitality even amid demographic collapse, the author stresses congregación—the relocation of native communities—as destructive to indigenous connections to land...

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