
Artes De Mexico: A Culinary Compendium of Beasts in Mexico
By José Luis Trueba Lara, Francisco Hernández, Wilhelm Knechtel, Alfredo López Austin, Miguel del Barco, Francisco Xavier Clavijero, Madame Calderón de la Barca, José de Acosta, Juan Alcalde de Rueda, Teresa Castelló Yturbide, Alice Dixon le Plongeon, Pedro Gutiérrez de Cuevas, Diego de Fuenllana, Diego de Landa, Octavio López Paredes, Peter Masters, Carlos Muñoz Muñoz, Eduardo Norton, Martín de Palomar, Andrés Pérez de Ribas, Ignaz Pfefferkorn, Friedrich Ratzel, Bernardino de Sahagún, Manuel Toussaint, Gaspar Antonio Xiú
Amulets. Looking to anthropology, history and literature, this issue examines the multiple meanings and varied forms of amulets: objects steeped in magical power, beliefs, hopes and frustrations. With each article, the writers bring us closer to the more universal purpose of amulets—protecting us from evil and fostering good luck—while unraveling strands of the complex web that imbues amulets with magic, mystery and symbolism. In this issue, Artes de México invokes the protection of the amulets that appear on its pages—the Hand of Fatma, the Saint Benedict medal, coral, scapulars, gold tintinnabula, ankhs, relics, cimarute and others—and we fervently wish that it may be extended to our readers, as well.
Choose options

