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Article

Volume 38 • Number 2

Summer 2004



 

A Postmodern Tonantzín

 

by Jane Duran

Visitors to the Puebla area in Mexico are frequently taken to the church of Santa María Tonantzínla, where they are told that they will see three or more styles of architecture simultaneously. Guidebooks to the area prominently feature this church and others like it, both as examples — or so the reader is told — of the "Baroque," and as exemplars of the handiwork and craftsmanship of the indigenous. Because of the importance of various notions of style insofar as teaching in the arts is concerned, it might seem important to try to articulate what is meant by simultaneity of styles. In addition, today's students are often baffled by uses of the term "postmodern." In this essay I will argue that Santa María Tonantzínla may have some surprising lessons for us all.


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