Child of the Flower-Song People

NOTES

Page 19: “Not a soul was left….” Jiménez, Life and Death in Milpa Alta , 177.

Page 25: “the spirit of Mexico.” McDonough, The Learned Ones , 91.

Page 32: “living link.” Charlot , Jean Charlot and Luz Jimenez , 2.

Page 36: “I have seen many good things and many bad things in my life, but what I loved most….” Jiménez, Life and Death in Milpa , 5.

See complete bibliography and more information on website: GloriaAmescua.com

SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY

Charlot, John. “Jean Charlot and Luz Jiménez.” Originally published as “Jean Charlot y Luz Jiménez.” Parteaguas 2, no. 8 (Spring 2007). jeancharlot.org/writings-on-jc/john-char- lot_jclj.html. Jiménez, Luz. Life and Death in Milpa Alta: A Nahuatl Chronicle of Díaz and Zapata . Translated and edited by Fernando Horcasitas. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1972. Karttunen, Frances. “The Linguistic Career of Doña Luz Jiménez.” Estudios de Cultura Náhuatl 30 (1999): 267–74. www.historicas.unam.mx/publicaciones/revistas/nahuatl/pdf /ecn30/595.pdf. Luz Jiménez: Symbol of a Millennial People . Austin: MexicArte Museum, 2000. texashistory.unt .edu/ark:/67531/metapth304475/m1/2/. McDonough, Kelly Shannon. “Indigenous Experience in Mexico: Readings in the Nahua Intellectual Tradition.” PhD diss., University of Minnesota, 2010, 127–67. conservancy .umn.edu/handle/11299/93968. McDonough, Kelly S. The Learned Ones: Nahua Intellectuals in Postconquest Mexico . Tuscon: University of Arizona Press, 2014, 120-153. Villanueva, Jesús. “Doña Luz: Inspiration and Image of a National Culture.” Voices of Mexico , no. 41 (October–December 1997): 19–24. www.revistascisan.unam.mx/Voices/pdfs/4105.pdf.

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