Place and Person at Pre-Hispanic Teotihuacan, Mexico

Susan D. Gillespie
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Abstract

There are significant societal differences evident in the material remains of the Classic period (ca. AD 250-600) city of Teotihuacan in central Mexico compared to contemporary Maya kingdoms in southern Mexico and Guatemala, despite both being part of the larger Mesoamerican civilization, sharing many cultural features. One proposed explanation for these differences derives from an analytical social science dichotomy that contrasts groups and individuals. According to this approach, Maya art and architecture indicate a society centered on individuals, particularly the rivalrous semi-divine rulers. Teotihuacan’s depersonalized art, lack of royal tombs, and gridded city plan are believed to indicate a corporate ethos in which individuals were subsumed by the societal collective. However, archaeological evidence for these interpretations is not compelling; moreover, the dichotomy itself is misleading. The key to these differences may lie in conceptions of embodied versus emplaced personae. The identity of Teotihuacanos was shaped by living within the city itself, and their concepts of personhood were entwined with their built environment in ways different from their Maya counterparts.
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墨西哥特奥蒂瓦坎前西班牙时期的地点与人物
与墨西哥南部和危地马拉的当代玛雅王国相比,位于墨西哥中部的古典时期(约公元 250-600 年)特奥蒂瓦坎城的物质遗存存在着明显的社会差异,尽管两者都是更大的中美洲文明的一部分,具有许多共同的文化特征。对这些差异的一种解释来源于社会科学分析中将群体和个人对立起来的二分法。根据这种方法,玛雅艺术和建筑表明这是一个以个人为中心的社会,尤其是以敌对的半神统治者为中心。特奥蒂瓦坎的非个人化艺术、王室陵墓的缺失以及网格状的城市规划被认为表明了一种企业精神,在这种精神中,个人被社会集体所淹没。然而,这些解释的考古证据并不令人信服;此外,二分法本身也具有误导性。造成这些差异的关键可能在于对 "化身"(embodied personae)和 "置身"(emplaced personae)的概念。特奥蒂瓦坎人的身份是在城市生活中形成的,他们的人格概念与建筑环境息息相关,这一点与玛雅人不同。
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