213
chaPTeR 1
- Includes Tlatelolco; from Edward Calnek,
“ Tenochtitlan-Tlatelolco: The Natural History
of a City.” - Jean-Noel Biraben and Didier Blanchet,
“Essay on the Population of Paris and Its Vicin-
ity since the Sixteenth Century”; Seville figures
from 1534 from Ruth Pike, “Population Trends:
The Demographic Revolution of Seville”; John
A. Marino, Becoming Neapolitan: Citizen Culture
in Baroque Naples, 9; Christopher Hibbert,
Rome, the Biography of a City, 156, 161. - Hernando [Hernán] Cortés, Letters from
Mexico, trans. Anthony Pagden, 266, 270. - Bartolomé de las Casas, The Devastation
of the Indies: A Brief Account, trans. Herma
Briffault, 64. - Robert Barlow, “Some Remarks on the
Term ‘Aztec Empire.’” - Bernardo de Balbuena, La Grandeza
Mexicana. - Michael J. Schreffler, The Art of Allegiance:
Visual Culture and Imperial Power in Baroque
New Spain, 9–35. - Frances F. Berdan and Patricia Rieff
Anawalt, eds., The Codex Mendoza. - Henry B. Nicholson, “The History of the
Codex Mendoza”; Jorge Gómez Tejada, “Making
the ‘Codex Mendoza,’ Constructing the ‘Codex
Mendoza’: A Reconsideration of a 16th Century
Mexican Manuscript.” - Elizabeth Hill Boone, Stories in Red
and Black: Pictorial Histories of the Aztecs and
Mixtecs, 65–70, 197–237. - Paul Ricoeur, Memory, History, Forgetting,
trans. Kathleen Blamey and David Pellauer,
209–227.
12. Charles Dibble, ed. and trans., Códice
Aubin: Historia de la nación mexicana:
Reproducción a todo color del códice de 1576.
13. Richard L. Kagan and Fernando Marías,
Urban Images of the Hispanic World, 1493–1793,
9–11.
14. Robert J. Mullen, Architecture and Its
Sculpture in Viceregal Mexico, 4.
15. Federico Navarrete Linares, Los orígenes
de los pueblos indígenas del valle de México, 25.
16. Henri Lefebvre, The Production of Space,
trans. D. Nicholson-Smith, 85, 31.
17. Michel de Certeau, The Practice of
Everyday Life, trans. Steven Rendall, 92–93.
18. Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life, 93.
19. Certeau, The Practice of Everyday Life, 96.
20. Lefebvre, The Production of Space, 45.
21. Lefebvre, The Production of Space, 39, 46.
22. Lefebvre outlines them as follows: “1.
Spatial practice, which embraces production
and reproduction, and the particular locations
and spatial sets characteristic of each social
formation. Spatial practice ensures continuity
and some degree of cohesion. In terms of social
space, and of each member of a given society’s
relationship to that space, this cohesion implies
a guaranteed level of competence and a specific
level of performance. 2. Representations of space,
which are tied to the relations of production
and to the ‘order’ which those relations impose,
and hence to knowledge, to signs, to codes, and
to ‘frontal’ relations. 3. Representational spaces,
embodying complex symbolisms, sometimes
coded, sometimes not, linked to the clandestine
or underground side of social life, as also to art
(which may come eventually to be defined less as
a code of space than a code of representational
spaces).” Lefebvre, The Production of Space, 33.
23. Anthony F. Aveni, Skywatchers, 33.
24. Edward Calnek, “El sistema de mercado
en Tenochtitlan.”
25. Andrés Lira González, Comunidades
indígenas frente a la ciudad de México.
26. Sonia Lombardo de Ruiz, Atlas histórico
de la ciudad de México.
27. Edward S. Casey, “Remembering
as Intentional” and “Place Memory,” in
Remembering: A Phenomenological Study.
28. Gaston Bachelard, The Poetics of Space,
trans. M. Jolas.
29. Maurice Halbwachs, On Collective
Memory, ed. and trans. Lewis A. Coser; Paul
Connerton, How Societies Remember.
30. Lefebvre, The Production of Space, 73.
31. Luis González Aparicio, Plano
reconstructivo de la región de Tenochtitlan; Ángel
Palerm, Obras hidráulicas prehispánicas en el
sistema lacustre del Valle de México.
32. Alain Musset, D’leau vive à l’eau morte;
Gabriel Espinosa Pineda, El embrujo del lago.
33. Charles Gibson, The Aztecs under
Spanish Rule.
34. James Lockhart, The Nahuas after the
Conquest: A Social and Cultural History of the
Indians of Central Mexico, Sixteenth through
Eighteenth Centuries.
35. William F. Connell, After Moctezuma:
Indigenous Politics and Self-Government in
Mexico City, 1524–1730. María Castañeda de la
Paz, “Historia de una casa real: Origen y ocaso
del linaje gobernante en México-Tenochtitlan”;
María Castañeda de la Paz, “El Plano Parcial
de la Ciudad de México: Nuevas aportaciones
en base al estudio de su lista de tlatoque”;
Emma Pérez-Rocha and Rafael Tena, La
nobleza indígena del centro de México después de