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Houses in a Landscape: Memory and Everyday Life in Mesoamerica

Posted By: tot167
Houses in a Landscape: Memory and Everyday Life in Mesoamerica

Julia Hendon, "Houses in a Landscape: Memory and Everyday Life in Mesoamerica"
Duk e Univ ersity Press | 2010 | ISBN: 0822347040, 0822346931 | 312 pages | PDF | 2,8 MB

In "Houses in a Landscape", Julia A. Hendon examines the connections between social identity and social memory using archaeological research on indigenous societies that existed more than one thousand years ago in what is now Honduras. While these societies left behind monumental buildings, the remains of their dead, remnants of their daily life, intricate works of art, and fine examples of craftsmanship such as pottery and stone tools, they left only a small body of written records. Despite the paucity of written information, Hendon contends that an archaeological study of memory in past societies like these is possible and worthwhile. It is possible because memory is not just a faculty of the individual mind operating in isolation, but a social process embedded in the materiality of human existence. Intimately bound up in the relations people develop with one another and with the world around them through what they do, where and how they do it, and with whom or what, memory leaves material traces. Hendon conducted research on three contemporaneous Native American civilizations that flourished from the seventh century CE through the eleventh: the Maya kingdom of Copan, the hilltop centre of Cerro Palenque, and the dispersed settlement of the Cuyumapa valley. She analyzes domestic life in these societies, from cooking to crafting, as well as public and private ritual events including the ballgame. Combining her findings with a rich body of theory from anthropology, history, and geography, she explores how objects - the things people build, make, use, exchange, and discard - help people remember. In so doing, she demonstrates how everyday life becomes part of the social processes of remembering and forgetting, and how 'memory communities' assert connections between the past and the present.