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Constructing the Maya: Ethnicity, State Formation, and Material Culture in Yucatan, Chiapas, and Guatemala
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Constructing the Maya: Ethnicity, State Formation, and Material Culture in Yucatan, Chiapas, and Guatemala

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This special issue of Ethnohistory is a significant contribution to the history and anthropology of the Maya in both Mexico and Guatemala. Utilizing a comparative analytic framework, these essays explore the ethnic dimensions-indigeneity, indigenismo, mestizaje, racial subjugation-of state formation as well as state practice in indigenous regions. The contributors emphasize how the material aspects of state formation-roads and infrastructure; model villages; restored ruins; portrait photography; highland marketplaces; modern improvements; traditional cultural performances, artifacts, and dress-become theaters for the construction and reconstruction of ethnic and political entities and relationships. Taken as a whole, the collection challenges a tendency toward the segmentation of the discussion of the Maya into distinct disciplines (anthropology and history), national historiographies (Mexican and Guatemalan), and, within Mexico, distinct regional historiographies (Yucatan and Chiapas). Contributors: David Carey Jr., Paul K. Eiss, Ben Fallaw, Stephen E. Lewis, Walter E. Little, John M. Watanabe

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Duke University Press
Country
United States
Date
1 October 2008
Pages
188
ISBN
9780822366911

This special issue of Ethnohistory is a significant contribution to the history and anthropology of the Maya in both Mexico and Guatemala. Utilizing a comparative analytic framework, these essays explore the ethnic dimensions-indigeneity, indigenismo, mestizaje, racial subjugation-of state formation as well as state practice in indigenous regions. The contributors emphasize how the material aspects of state formation-roads and infrastructure; model villages; restored ruins; portrait photography; highland marketplaces; modern improvements; traditional cultural performances, artifacts, and dress-become theaters for the construction and reconstruction of ethnic and political entities and relationships. Taken as a whole, the collection challenges a tendency toward the segmentation of the discussion of the Maya into distinct disciplines (anthropology and history), national historiographies (Mexican and Guatemalan), and, within Mexico, distinct regional historiographies (Yucatan and Chiapas). Contributors: David Carey Jr., Paul K. Eiss, Ben Fallaw, Stephen E. Lewis, Walter E. Little, John M. Watanabe

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Duke University Press
Country
United States
Date
1 October 2008
Pages
188
ISBN
9780822366911