中美洲地区的古西墨西哥

IF 1.8 0 ARCHAEOLOGY Ethnoarchaeology Pub Date : 2020-07-02 DOI:10.1080/19442890.2021.1896276
A. Deluca
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引用次数: 0

摘要

有机会学习传统宗教或农业实践——相反,他们正在把注意力转向社区以外的机会。基于这些原因,Boremanse哀叹拉坎东北部的“灭绝”,尽管我对将文化习俗和人混为一谈有些异议,特别是考虑到有许多人仍然认为自己是“Hach Winik”,而且人数可能比以前更多。如前所述,书中包含的观察结果几乎完全集中在Boremanse与一组精选的已婚男性的互动上。这种性别观点在玛雅民族志中并不罕见,很大程度上归因于拉坎东人严格的性别角色。Boremanse不太可能被允许像观察男性那样自由地观察女性并与之交流。尽管如此,这种观点还是相当有限的,尽管读者被小心翼翼地引导着通过仪式实践的复杂性,但这些仪式的含义及其在更广泛的社区中的作用却没有得到充分的探索。这本书是为学者和其他人已经有相当强烈的玛雅文化和历史的感觉,是理想的研究人员感兴趣的土著宗教习俗的墨西哥和中美洲。当然,考虑到物质文化的广泛探索,特别是粘土香炉的使用,这本书对玛雅考古学家也有用处。Boremanse对在洞穴和玛雅遗址周围沉积粘土容器的当代实践的观察,为从前哥伦布时期的环境中发现的类似沉积物提供了解释。然而,值得注意的是,拉康顿人很可能不是他们今天穿越的那些废墟的人的后代,因此,在过去的做法和书中提到的做法之间不应该有直接的历史联系。作为一个整体,《废墟、洞穴、神和香炉》是对拉坎东相当健壮的民族志语料库的一个优秀而新颖的补充。这本书的优势在于它对包括考古学家在内的其他研究人员的实用性,以及它对细节和细微差别的仔细关注。
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Ancient West Mexico in the Mesoamerican Ecumene
have opportunity to learn about traditional religion or agricultural practice – rather, they are turning their attention to opportunity outside of the community. For these reasons, Boremanse laments the near “extinction” of the northern Lacandon, though I take some issue with the conflating of cultural practices and people, especially considering there are many who still identify as “Hach Winik,” and perhaps in higher numbers than before. As noted earlier, the observations included in the book focus almost exclusively on Boremanse’s interactions with a select group of married men. This gendered perspective is not uncommon in ethnographies of the Maya and is largely attributable to strict gender roles among the Lacandon. It is unlikely that Boremanse was permitted to observe and communicate with women as freely as he was men. Still, this perspective is quite limiting, and although the reader is carefully shepherded through the intricacies of ritual practice, the implications of such rituals and their role in the wider community are underexplored. This book is intended for scholars and others that already have a fairly strong sense of Maya culture and history and is ideal for researchers interested in Indigenous religious practices of Mexico and Central America. Certainly, given the extensive exploration of material culture, and particularly the use of clay incense burners, the book also has utility for Maya archaeologists. Boremanse’s observations of contemporary practices of depositing clay vessels in caves and around Maya ruins informs interpretations of similar deposits recovered from Precolumbian contexts. It is important to note, however, that the Lacandon are likely not the descendants of the people whose ruins they traverse today, and as such no direct historical association should be made between the practices of the past and those noted in the book. Taken as a whole, Ruins, Caves, Gods, and Incense Burners is an excellent and novel addition to a fairly robust corpus of ethnographic data concerning the Lacandon. The book’s strengths lie in its utility to other researchers, including archaeologists, and its careful attention to detail and nuance.
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来源期刊
Ethnoarchaeology
Ethnoarchaeology ARCHAEOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: Ethnoarchaeology, a cross-cultural peer-reviewed journal, focuses on the present position, impact of, and future prospects of ethnoarchaeological and experimental studies approaches to anthropological research. The primary goal of this journal is to provide practitioners with an intellectual platform to showcase and appraise current research and theoretical and methodological directions for the 21st century. Although there has been an exponential increase in ethnoarchaeological and experimental research in the past thirty years, there is little that unifies or defines our subdiscipline. Ethnoarchaeology addresses this need, exploring what distinguishes ethnoarchaeological and experimental approaches, what methods connect practitioners, and what unique suite of research attributes we contribute to the better understanding of the human condition. In addition to research articles, the journal publishes book and other media reviews, periodic theme issues, and position statements by noted scholars.
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