About This Book
A scholarly survey examines the literary output of Indigenous peoples of the Americas, arguing they possess vivid imagination, rich vocabularies, and strong storytelling traditions. It reviews narrative, didactic, oratorical, poetic, and dramatic forms, summarizes surviving manuscripts and traditions—including Mesoamerican codices, Maya and Nahuatl writings, Andean quipus, and oral epics—and notes native compositions in European languages. The essay discusses calendars, ritual texts, maps, and liturgical and rhetorical practices, assesses language structure and translation issues, and calls for preservation and publication of rare documents while emphasizing their value for ethnology and comparative literature.
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