Essays featured in this issue analyze the use of cartography to communicate the urban form of early colonial Mexico City and the application of botanical and protochemical knowledge to make ink for native maps from Oaxaca. Other essays address the representation of ethnicity and space in seventeenth-century Manila, the construction of spatial boundaries through the use of word and image in central Mexico, and the survival of Nahua place names and social ordering in eighteenth-century Mexico City.
Alexander Hidalgo is Assistant Professor of Latin American History at Texas Christian University. John F. López is a Provost's Postdoctoral Scholar at the University of Chicago.
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