Toward a Poetics of Maya Art and Writing

IF 1.6 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY CAMBRIDGE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL Pub Date : 2024-06-03 DOI:10.1017/s0959774324000167
Michael D. Carrasco
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Abstract

This article identifies large-scale chiastic and bracketing structures in contemporary, colonial and Classic Maya verbal art and literature. These structures are composed of the repetition of lines, verses and stanzas that frame sections of texts and sometimes images. Initially, the argument focuses on an ethnopoetic analysis that directs attention to such forms in modern and colonial narrative and presents an extended contemporary Yucatecan story to illustrate key forms. Second, it turns to similar structures in Classic Mayan narrative written in Maya hieroglyphs to examine the way rhetorical and linguistic tropes intertwined with corresponding features in visual compositions to craft highly sophisticated artistic programmes. By tracking how specific structures are deployed and in what contexts, this article defines an aesthetic that not only sheds light on verbal narratives, but also elucidates visual programmes and their interrelationship with text to reveal a fundamental principle in Maya world conceptualization. This literary and visual analysis develops a cross-medial Maya aesthetics comparable to other global poetic traditions.

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迈向玛雅艺术与写作诗学
这篇文章指出了当代、殖民时期和古典玛雅语言艺术和文学中的大型楔形和括弧结构。这些结构由行文、诗句和句子的重复构成,它们构成了文本的框架,有时也构成了图像。首先,论证侧重于民族诗学分析,引导人们关注现代和殖民地叙事中的此类形式,并通过一个扩展的当代尤卡坦故事来说明主要形式。其次,它转向玛雅象形文字书写的古典玛雅叙事中的类似结构,以研究修辞和语言套路如何与视觉构成中的相应特征交织在一起,从而制作出高度复杂的艺术方案。通过追踪特定结构是如何被使用的以及在何种语境下使用,本文定义了一种美学,它不仅揭示了语言叙事,还阐明了视觉程式及其与文本的相互关系,从而揭示了玛雅世界概念化的基本原则。这种文学和视觉分析发展了一种可与全球其他诗歌传统相媲美的跨媒介玛雅美学。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Cambridge Archaeological Journal is the leading journal for cognitive and symbolic archaeology. It provides a forum for innovative, descriptive and theoretical archaeological research, paying particular attention to the role and development of human intellectual abilities and symbolic beliefs and practices. Specific topics covered in recent issues include: the use of cultural neurophenomenology for the understanding of Maya religious belief, agency and the individual, new approaches to rock art and shamanism, the significance of prehistoric monuments, ritual behaviour on Pacific Islands, and body metamorphosis in prehistoric boulder artworks. In addition to major articles and shorter notes, the Cambridge Archaeological Journal includes review features on significant recent books.
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