@article{0493c58e6be744ff818c38e51047ec45,
title = "Worlds without End the Aztecs under Spanish Rule: A History of the Indians of the Valley of Mexico, 1519-1810, by Charles Gibson",
keywords = "colonial Mexico, ethnohistory, indigenous language",
author = "Camilla Townsend",
note = "Funding Information: The “Lockhartian” school, often referring to their larger project as the New Philology, indirectly influenced important work being done in Mexico. There, scholars had long studied certain Nahuatl codices and poems as presented by {\'A}ngel Mar{\'i}a Garibay and then Miguel Le{\'o}n Portilla at the Universidad Nacional Aut{\'o}noma de M{\'e}xico (UNAM). Over the past thirty years, however, some extraordinarily close readings and translations of other types of Nahuatl texts (mundane sources and historical annals) have been produced by such figures as Rafael Tena and the late Luis Reyes Garc{\'i}a and their students. Scholars in Europe were also paying attention. Lockhart{\textquoteright}s influence was, for instance, instrumental in shaping the emergence of a key think tank at the University of Warsaw, which has received funding from the European Union.37",
year = "2019",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1093/ahr/rhz175",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "124",
pages = "539--549",
journal = "American Historical Review",
issn = "0002-8762",
publisher = "University of Chicago Press",
number = "2",
}