rain and drought climate and its representations in mexico

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RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico Esther KATZ Annamária LAMMEL Marina GOLOUBINOFF 4-7/10/2007 15 th Conference of the Society for Human Ecology Climate and Culture

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Page 1: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

RAIN and DROUGHTClimate and its representations

in Mexico

Esther KATZAnnamária LAMMEL

Marina GOLOUBINOFF

4-7/10/2007

15th Conference of the Society for Human EcologyClimate and Culture

Page 2: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

The climate of Mexico

• Trade-winds from the Atlantic and Pacific oceans

• Cold continental North winds stopped by the Neovolcanic Axis

• Mountainous land (Sierra Madre occidental, oriental & del Sur) except on coastal plains, Tehuantepec Isthmus and Yucatan peninsula

> temperature and rain variations…

Page 3: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Trade-winds

Sierra Madre occidental

Sierra Madre oriental

Sierra Madre del Sur

Neovolcanic Axis

Trade-winds

Cold winds

Yucatan peninsula

TehuantepecIsthmus

Page 4: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Seasons

• Alternation : dry/rainy season• Duration of rainy season (4 to 6 months) varies

according to local climate : – Subhumid : april-october– Semi-dry : june-september

• In the highlands : dry season : Nov.-Jan. : cold (frost), Feb.-Apr. : warm

• Some rain in January (period of weather forecast for the year)

• ‘dog days’ (canícula) (temporary decrease of the rains) at the end of July

Page 5: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Saison sècheRainy season

Page 6: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Dry season

Page 7: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Importance of the rain

Codex BorgiaTlaloc: Aztec Rain God

Page 8: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

The Mesoamerican cultural area:sedentary corn cultivators

Page 9: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

MayaOtomangueanUto-Aztec (nahua)

Totonac

Purhepecha

Maya (Huastec)

Mixe-Zoque

Uto-Aztec(huichol)

Uto-Aztec(pipil)

Mesoamerican linguistic families

The area of study:The MESOAMERICAN CULTURAL AREA

Approximative limits of Mesoamerica

Page 10: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

The Mesoamerican cultural area

• Indian groups of differentlinguistic families

• Constant circulation of ideas, techniques, goods through the whole cultural area ! unity and diversity in the perceptions of climate

• Spanish colonisation!Biological and cultural mixing! integration of rituals and representations from

the hispanic culture• Cultural continuity in nature representations

Page 11: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Rain and agriculture

• Importance of rain for subsistance agriculture

• Corn cycle // rainy seasoncycle

• Alliance of dry season heatand first rains humidity : propicious for sowing corn // human reproduction

Page 12: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Rain and agriculture :Tlaloc and corn

Codex Borgia

Page 13: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

The rain cycle according to Mexican Indians

Clouds are created in the womb of the mountain, are pushed by the wind to the top, then fall into rain

Page 14: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Inside of the mountain:the earth womb

Representation of a mountain, Codex Nuttall (Mixtec)

Page 15: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Food symbolismHeat + humidity // earth womb

Earth oven, earth oven meat and corn, tamal, meat broth

Page 16: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Meteorological phenomena(Mixtec)

• Dry phenomena

– Dry wind– Dry lightning– Dry storm

(devil/wind)

!All associated to rain!All come from the womb

of the mountain

• Rain phenomena– Rain– Rain wind– Rain lightning– Rain storm

(feathered serpent)– Hail– Dew– Frost/snow– Chahuistle– Rainbow (serpent)

Page 17: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Weather forecast

• Attempt of a control on weather• Importance of rain forecast, especially arrival of

rainy season• Observation of nature (short term) :

– animals– Planets and stars– Natural phenomena (clouds, wind, dew, earthquakes)

• Symbolical systems (long term) :– 12 days (cabañuelas)– Animal symbolism

Page 18: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Rain rituals• Attempt to control meteorological phenomena• Rituals executed by :

– a community– Individuals– ritual specialist (rain-maker, priest)

• Places – Sacred (church, temple, sanctuary)– Liminal (caves, springs, top of mountains)

• Time– Before the rainy season (apr-may, St Mark, St Cross)– Beginning of rainy season (may-july, St Isidore-St James)– After the rainy season (sept-nov, All Saints)

Page 19: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Rogations pour la pluie

Rogations pour la pluieRain sanctuary on the top of a mountain

Page 20: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Rain rituals : Volador

– Practised by Totonacs, Huastecs, Otomis

– A flight to secure the balance of the universeand the coming of the rainCf. Lammel.

Page 21: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

La Malinche

Graniceros (hailers) :rain-makers stroken by the lightning

(Neovolcanic axis)

Other areas : rain-makers with nahual of lightning, feathered serpent, whirlwind

(even close to large cities)

Page 22: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Offerings for the rain

•Copal incense•Sacrified animals•Beverages

•Cocoa drink (blood)•Pulque (agave beer : water, blood, milk, semen)

Codex Borgia : Agave (century plant) and pulque

Page 23: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

La fête des morts : fin des récoltes, fin des pluiesAll Saints :

End of the rainy season, End of the harvest,

Offerings to the dead, Thanks for the rain

Page 24: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Conclusion• Rain and drought are a symbolic axis in daily

practises such as agriculture and cooking, as well as in the representation of reproduction, vital processes, fertility and abundance.

• Continuity and constant evolution of practises, knowledge and representations

• Climate change : now a discussion topic among Mexican farmers > interpreted within their symbolic framework.

Page 25: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Conclusion• Scientists and other stakeholders in the

present debates on climate have rarely taken into account the folk knowledge, and even less its symbolical aspects, often interpreted as beliefs or superstitions. Yet the knowledge is not separate from the expression of the global cosmovision of a society.

• In a world where climatic risks and disasters are being worsened by human impact on nature, lessons may be drawn from farmers’ knowledge and world view.

Page 26: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

Conclusion

• Urgency to collectdata on traditionalknowledge

• In Mexico : migration to US: risks of loss of knowledge on nature

Post Office in the Mixtec Highlands : queuing to receive money from relatives working in the US

Page 27: RAIN and DROUGHT Climate and its representations in Mexico

References• Lammel, A., Goloubinoff, M., Katz, E. (eds), In press, Aires y lluvias

Antropología del clima en México, México, CIESAS/Universidad Iberoamericana/CEMCA/IRD

• Broda, J., Iwaniszewski, S. & A. Montero (eds), 2001, La Montaña en el paisaje ritual. México, UNAM/CONACULTA-INAH/UAP.

• Albores B. & J. Broda (eds), 1997, Graniceros. Cosmovisión y meteorología indígenas de Mésoamérica. Zinacantepec (E° de México), Colegio Mexiquense/México, UNAM.

• Goloubinoff, M., Katz, E., Lammel, A. (eds), 1997 - Antropología del clima en el mundo hispanoamericano, Quito. Abya-Yala. 2 T.

• Many articles on rain rituals and prehispanic gods

E. Katz (IRD/MNHN/CDS-UnB), [email protected]. Lammel (Univ. Paris-VIII), [email protected]. Goloubinoff, [email protected]