Ancient wisdom, modern warrriors: the (re)invention of a Mesoamerican tradition in Xilam
Xilam is a modern Mexican martial art that is inspired by pre-Hispanic warrior cultures of ancient Mesoamerica, namely the Aztecs (Mexica), Maya and Zapotec cultures. It provides a noteworthy case study of a Latin American fighting system that has been recently invented, but aspires to rescue, rediscover and relive the warrior philosophies that existed before the Spanish Conquest and subsequent movements beginning in 1521. Using the thought-provoking work of anthropologist Guillermo Bonfil Batalla, México Profundo, I aim to analyse the Xilam Martial Arts Association through the way that they represent themselves in their three main media outlets: the official webpage, the Facebook group and the YouTube channel. Overall, the data suggests that certain elements of Mesoamerican civilisation may be transmitted to young Mexicans through a mind-body discipline, which in turn acts as a form of physical (re)education. Overall, xilam is both an invented tradition (in a technical sense) and a re-invented tradition (in a cultural sense) that provides lessons on the timeless issues of transformation, transmission and transcendence.
History
Published in
Martial Arts StudiesPublisher
Cardiff University PressVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Citation
Jennings, G. (2016) 'Ancient wisdom, modern warrriors: the (re) invention of a Mesoamerican tradition in Xilam', Martial Arts Studies, (2), pp.59-70Electronic ISSN
2057-5696Cardiff Met Affiliation
- Cardiff School of Sport and Health Sciences
Cardiff Met Authors
George JenningsCardiff Met Research Centre/Group
- Qualitative Research Methods and Social Theory
Copyright Holder
- © The Authors
Language
- en