Scott Hawkins Lecture
presented by the Clements Department of History
and the Department of Anthropology
Southern Methodist University

John Sullivan
Professor of the Graduate Program
in Colonial History
Universidad Autónoma de Zacatecas (Mexico)
Reviving the Historic
Nahuatl (Aztec)
Language of Mexico
Wednesday, March 19, 2008
DeGolyer
Library
6404 Hilltop Lane at McFarlin
Southern Methodist University
Dallas, Texas
6:30 pm
reception
7:00 pm
lecture
The
introduction of alphabetic writing in Nahuatl, soon after
the Spanish Conquest of Mexico, opened up a new mode of
communication to speakers of the language. During the next
three hundred years, thousands of works were written in
multiple genres. This tradition is currently
being reactivated at the Universidad Autónoma de Zacatecas,
where indigenous students are participating in the
preparation of a monolingual dictionary and grammar of
Modern Huastecan Nahuatl. These reference materials will
serve as the foundation for a program of college level
academics conducted within the perspective of the native
speaker's language, history, and world view. Students and
professors will collaborate in activities, including the
study of Colonial Nahuatl manuscripts, the critique of
related Western scholarship, original research, and projects
designed to promote the extended use of indigenous languages
in urban society.
William P Clements Department of History
Southern Methodist University
PO Box 750176
Dallas TX 75275-0176
214-768-2984
hist@smu.edu
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Last updated February
10, 2008.
