Issue Home

Essays / Ensayos / Ensaios

Performance and Mayan Identity on the Yucatan Peninsula
Tamara Underiner

Black Indians and Savage Christians
Sarah Jo Townsend

La historia de "Benetton contra los mapuches"
Claudia Briones & Ana Ramos

"Cistemaw iyiniw ohci," A Performance by Cheryl L'Hirondelle
Candice Hopkins

A identidade do Amazonas expressa no folclore do Boi-Bumbá
Erick Bessa Pinheiro

Short Articles / Artículos Breves / Artigos Curtos

Bolivia's Indians Confront Globalization
John Mohawk

South Dakota is the Mississippi of the North
Luke Warm Water

Excerpt from Powwow
George Horse Capture

Casino Nation
Terry Jones

Dana Claxton
Kristin Dowell

Op-Ed: Commercialism and Native Art

Multimedia Presentations

In Every Issue:

Humor / Humor / Humor

e-Gallery / e-Galería / e-Galeria

Reviews / Reseñas / Resenhas

News and Events / Noticias y Eventos / Notícias e Eventos

Activism / Activismo / Ativismo

Links / Enlaces / Links

[Page 4: Black Indians and Savage Christians: Unmaking the “Other” in the Performance of the Conquest, by Sarah Jo Townsend]

Printer-friendly version

It is known that the Purépechas that Ciudad Real found so curious and intriguing had a long history of interaction with the Chichimecas to the north that vacillated between violent confrontation and integration. The Relación de Michoacán, a text compiled by a Spanish friar between the years 1539 and 1541 and based on the accounts of Purépecha informants, traces the historical development of pre-Conquest Michoacán and reveals the ambivalent relationship between its inhabitants and the Chichimecas (21). The nomadic tribes, considered semi-barbaric by the more settled groups, periodically made forays into Purépecha communities and often settled among them. By the time the Spanish arrived, the Purépecha had absorbed many cultural traits of their neighbors to the north, and much of their political leadership was of Chichimeca descent. The Relación de Michoacán tells a tale of violent altercations, marriages, truces and acts of trickery between the two groups which, to a large extent, shaped the Purépecha identity.

This may explain the puzzling fact that in most of the scenes described by Ciudad Real, the "imitation Chichimecas" do not appear battling Spaniards; instead they are simply dancing, shouting war cries and "laughing just as real Chichimecas do," or throwing lemons at each other and knocking one another over the head with clubs. As ridiculous and degrading to the actors as these scenes may appear, they take on another meaning when seen alongside illustrations from the Relación de Michoacán that portray Purépechas and Chichimecas (in many cases indistinguishable to an outsider's eye) playing out their own dramas by exchanging blows to the head. This makes me think that Trexler and Harris are only half right when they see in the Chichimeca "disguise" the true identity of the one who wears it, and altogether wrong to view the performances in purely metaphorical terms. Rather than merely symbolizing the indigenous actors' own defeat or their spirit of resistance, it seems more likely that these performances are actively creating both identifications and dis-identifications among the actors, the Chichimecas they enact, and the Spanish observers. The internecine battles among the "Chichimecas" are not a duel between two opposed powers but a struggle that even at its most basic level involves three terms: the Purépecha (more accurately Purépecha/ Chichimeca/ Spanish) actor; his role as the "Chichimeca" who is simultaneously his ancestor (the Self) and his enemy Other; and the Spanish conqueror who is a Purépecha ally but also an Other of both the native parties. Seen in this way, the drama set in motion by the Spanish overlaps with and becomes inseparable from a very different conquest scenario between two groups whose complex form of relating to one another confounds the attempt to reduce relationships to two monolithic and mutually exclusive terms.

Whereas the Chichimecas were hostile but familiar adversaries closely intertwined with the Purépechas' own identity, the black slaves and freemen with whom the indigenous came into contact were more clearly definable as a distinct group. Despite the fact that indigenous people in Michoacán sometimes worked alongside blacks in mines or on haciendas, where slaves and free blacks often served as overseers for the owner, numerous regulations throughout Mexico prohibited blacks from living among or marrying indigenous people(22). Furthermore, colonial records show numerous complaints of violence by blacks and mulattos against Iindians, including many cases involving runaway slaves that date from the era of Alonso Ponce's travels (23). Given this evidence of tension between the two groups, it is not unreasonable to think that the view of the negros in the Tratado curioso as sinful and demonic was shared to a certain extent by some of the indigenous participants.

But clearly there is something else going on here as well. Harris points out the importance of the color black in pre-Conquest religious life and suggests that these performances have their roots in earlier rituals that have "disguised" themselves in order to pass unnoticed by the Spanish clerg(24). . In fact, the Relación de Michoacán indicates that the principal god of the Purépecha religion was black, and that one of their rulers and his lords frequently blackened themselves with soot in the god's honor (25). While pre-Christian beliefs are one of the factors that must be considered in interpreting these performances, I nevertheless object to Harris's reading of the black characters as a "disguise," a convenient cover for the continuation of native practices. Seeing these figures as a "hidden transcript" of a previously constituted indigenous subject denies the significance of the performers' relationship to real black slaves and once again elides the issue of the multiple "Others." It also assumes that performances can be read as symbolic statements rather than considering the possibility that these black Iindians are not saying the indigenous Self in defiance of the Spanish but rather creating it through the very act of performance (26).

Although they are a far from perfect source for understanding the finer points of 16th century performances, recent accounts of the many dances and rituals involving "black men" that are performed in Purépecha villages throughout Michoacán today provide some clues as to what may have been happening before the unseeing eyes of Ciudad Real and Alonso Ponce (27). According to Janet Brody Esser, an art historian who observed these performances over several years, they usually take place on a town's patron saint day and during the winter ceremonial season from December 25 to January 6. Associated with both the spiritual forces of Christianity and the "principal beings" of native Purépecha beliefs, "black men" sometimes accompany the image of the baby Jesus through town and at other times appear as huacaleros, long-distance traders from pre-Conquest times. Yet they usually wear wigs of black sheepskin and dance with what several of Esser's informants describe as "African" rhythms. Esser draws attention to the history of black slavery in colonial Mexico and suggests that "because his position was ambiguous – because he moved in both the Indian and the Spanish worlds while belonging to neither – the space the black came to occupy in the Tarascan world view was a sacred space, the place of myth." (28)

While it is risky to place too much weight on contemporary evidence, one detail regarding the general context in which the "black men" perform may help to shed light on why the "black slave" described by Ciudad Real tries his luck in a game of cards with Death. Esser states that a person who performs as a "black man" invariably does so because he has taken a religious vow – a manda – after he or a close relative has recovered from a serious illness. Given that this mode of performance as fulfillment of an obligation or debt payment is common to many indigenous rituals that originated in the pre-Conquest period, it is not impossible that a similar understanding was informing Purépecha performances in the 16th century (29). If there is a connection, then, this suggests that the newly arrived black slave sometimes manages to outplay his opponent Death. As a liminal figure who negotiates the boundaries between life and death just as he occupies a third position between the performers and their Spanish observers, the black mask is essential for the participants to construct their own sense of Self. Like the "Chichimecas" who deal each other blows, the "Black indians" – indigenous performers who both are and are not the "black men" they play – create their identity by continually traveling across its frontier.

If the lens through which I have been viewing these performances is not distorted, it implies that the dialectic between the indigenous "actor" and his black man and Chichimeca "roles" poses a challenge to the understanding of performance that underpins not only Ciudad Real's scenario of conquest but also Trexler's critique of power and Harris's model of resistance. Keeping both the performer and the other marginalized figure he or she performs within our frame of vision requires us to reconceptualize cultural resistance in a way that does not depend upon a simple inversion of the Self/Other dichotomy that authorizes the conquering power (30). It seems an act of perhaps unconscious oversight to ignore the fact that the people encountered by Alonso Ponce and Ciudad Real do not meet them face to face; the battle between "Self" and "Other" is one that their indigenous hosts would have been destined to lose, and it is unclear what winning it might mean. The way I interpret their actions, they take a different tactic, working through identities and differences to unmake the "Other" and create something new that bears no resemblance to the idea of the "copy."

Sarah J. Townsend is a doctoral student in the Spanish & Portuguese Department at New York University. She is co-editing the forthcoming Stages of Conflict: A Reader in Latin American Theatre & Performance with Diana Taylor.

Page: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

Post your comments, reactions, and responses to the pieces in the e-misférica forum. You can also post general questions about the e-journal.