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the midst of these collapses and the repositioning of hegemonies at world and regional levels, reinterpretations of the Popol Wuj continued. One of the topics of debate was how to resolve the issue of the translations; the other was about the influences and eventual appropriations to which the text might be subjected, whether from political, religious, cultural (endo- or exo-ethnic), or other types of organizations or institutions.

      In 1962 Antonio Villacorta wrote a second edition of the manuscript, this time translated word-for-word in a hyper-textualist approach, seeking complete semantic “purism.” He calls it “Crestomatía Quiché” – that is, a collection of writings chosen with educational aims, which seems to suggest the importance he gave to the dissemination of the text amongst the newer generations of Guatemalans.

      After having worked from 1945 on the rephoneticization of Mayan writing and having created special characters to represent the phonemes of the language, in 1977 Adrián Inés Chávez published a new version of the Pop-Wuj (Libro de Acontecimientos, or Book of Events). In 1997 he reedited it under the title Pop Wuj. Libro del Tiempo (Book of Time). It is a translation in four columns: a literal transcription, a phoneticized transcription, a literal translation in Castilian, and a Castilian version employing syntactical rules comprehensible to contemporary readers.

      The idea of this project was to recover precolonial phonetics and to decolonize the native language contaminated by Castilian sounds. He adds that the negative impact of Latin orthography on the K’iche’ language resulted in transmitting “feelings and ideas which are of a completely different nature than the Mayan cultural essence” (Matul Morales, 1997: xii; emphasis added). Antonio Pop Caal also maintains that those who wrote about natives while ignoring the basic characteristics of their culture represented them in a completely mistaken way (1988).

      Daniel Matul Morales did not limit the task of recovering the Popol Wuj to speculative activity. For him, as for many other Mayan activists, this intellectual work is a part of a plan to construct a “Multilingual and multicultural nation in its fundamental structures” (1997: xiv). It is a new political plan constructed during the insurgency against exploitation and segregation, in resisting genocide, and in building a process to achieve peace in the face of difficulties that persist until today. Matul Morales trusts that, with the “secrets” contained in the contents of the Popol Wuj tzijs, “the Maya are contributing to the construction of a new society wherein our philosophers, in a context revindicated after four hundred and seventy-three years of struggle, will continue in search of the latest truths” (ibid.).

      In 1971 Munro Edmonson published The Book of Counsel: The Popol Vuh of the Quiche Maya of Guatemala. This translation, the second into English (in 1950 Delia Goetz and Sylvanus Morley had translated the Recinos version), made some changes in the reading of the Popol Wuj. Situated in academia and with an ethnographic, rather than a linguistic, religious, philosophical, or literary focus (xi), he abandons the traditional form of translation into prose and instead presents paired verses. His idea was that “The Popol Vuh is in poetry and cannot be accurately understood in prose” (xi). And he insists that “Words matter, and formal discourse matters even more” (xii). Because of this Edmondson proposed capturing the essence of the text through the nature and “style” of language.

      With the assistance of a spiritual guide (daykeeper and seer) Andrés Xiloj, in 1986 Dennis Tedlock published his translation entitled Popol Vuh. The Definitive Edition of the Mayan Book of the Dawn of Life and the Glories of Gods and Kings. On the cover it also says: “commentary based on the ancient knowledge of the Modern Quiché Maya.” Tedlock’s focus was to read the original from a perspective of the “divinatory art” of seers and spiritual guides: “Diviners are, by profession, interpreters of difficult texts” (15). Tedlock states that when Andrés Xiloj began to read the Popol Wuj almost without difficulty, he understood that something special was occurring. Tedlock told Xiloj the meanings of archaic terms, and in turn the reader rendered an interpretation full of meaning (15). Tedlock concludes that his work is the result of a three-way dialogue between the wisdom of Xiloj’s profession, the manuscript, and his academic knowledge (16). The central theme is religious spirituality. Because of this the format of his translation alternates paragraphs in prose with others having the structure and tone of prayer – which is something he perceived as evident in the original text – in order to restore its ritual content.

      Tedlock’s translation was an inspired reading, based in mysticism and religion that interpreted the text from an astronomical and calendaric perspective (15). This is the way the translator found to link the text written in 1555 with the tumultuous present of the K’iche’. In this sense it is a subversive mysticism because it opposes the doctrine of the majority of the dominant Western religions in Guatemala. It subverts the inspiration in the biblical creed and in a God in Heaven, and centers its religiosity in the Earth – where it is assumed that life sprang, according to the Popol Wuj. This reading by Tedlock and Xiloj links the precolonial past with the present, erasing the gap opened by European civilization. Nevertheless, it admits that the two timelines will have to run in parallel in the future (13).

      Finally, the last version we will mention is that by Enrique Sam Colop, published in 1999 under the title Popol Wuj. Versión Poética K’iche’. Sam Colop, of K’iche’ origin, emphasizes the “multiple authorship” of the text, and indicates that the Ximénez version gathered elements from different systems of register and transmission of the text,

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