Gender-Differentiated Tarascan Surnames in Michoácan

2018
Journal of Interdisciplinary History 48(4): 465-483. Co-authored with Joel Thurtell.

Mexican parish registers provide a rich trove of data for analyzing trends in mortality and fertility and changes to indigenous family structures. Surnames are links between different times in the past, as well as to geographical areas. Surname meanings can be clues to ancient social systems and religious values. Attention to the use of gender-differentiated surnames and the practice underlying intergenerational surname transmission offers a new approach to the study of kinship and family organization among both precolonial and colonial Tarascans, leading to a deeper understanding of the meanings behind these surnames. Moreover, differing degrees of native surname retention could well be helpful in charting rates of cultural change in various places.

Previous
Previous

Installing and Getting Started with R (series of 8 videos)

Next
Next

Democracy is in danger when the census undercounts vulnerable populations