Preface to the new edition; 1. Point of departure; 2. Ancestor veneration and lineage organization in the Maya region; 3. Creating a genealogy of place; 4. Lineage as a crucible of inequality; 5. Kin groups and divine kingship in lowland Maya society; 6. Ancestors and archaeology of place; 7. Postscript: the future of the ancestors and the clash between science and human rights.
This book contains an entirely new introduction that synthesizes scholarship on practices of ancestral veneration that has emerged since the 1995 publication of the first edition.
Patricia A. McAnany is Kenan Eminent Professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. A Maya archaeologist who has conducted field research and cultural heritage programs through the Maya region, she is the founder of the Maya Area Cultural Heritage Initiative and co-founder of InHerit: Indigenous Heritage Passed to Present (www.in-herit.org). She is the author or co-editor of several books, most recently Textile Economies: Power and Value from the Local to the Transnational (2011), co-edited with Walter E. Little; Ancestral Maya Economies in Archaeological Perspective (Cambridge University Press, 2010); Questioning Collapse: Human Resilience, Ecological Vulnerability, and the Aftermath of Empire (2009), co-edited with Norman Yoffee; and Dimensions of Ritual Economy (2008), co-edited with E. Christian Wells. She has published in numerous professional journals and is the recipient of several research awards from the National Science Foundation and of fellowships from the Institute for the Arts and Humanities (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill), the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Radcliffe Center for Advanced Study at Harvard University.
Review of the first edition: 'Patricia McAnany's book is a gem. The writing style is elegant and stimulating, the argument tight and logically organized, the mix between concept and empirical data balanced, and the focus steadfast. She set out to write a 'different' kind of archaeology of the ancient Mayas, and she succeeded in doing just that. What we get is an 'anthropology' of Maya society rather than a description of artifacts, dates, material sequences, and theoretical jargon. I highly recommend this most readable book.' Robert M. Carmack, Ethnohistory Review of the first edition: 'This well-written book will repay reading by Mayanists and non-Mayanists alike. Besides its holistic approach, its strengths include the explicit recognition that ancient Maya society showed considerable variation over both space and time, and cannot be simply pigeonholed into one or another convenient typological category ... [McAnany] has certainly given Maya archaeologists a lot of ideas to consider in their future research.' William A. Haviland, American Anthropologist Review of the first edition: 'McAnany's book is a constructive and creative attempt to dissolve the conceptual dichotomies that so often in the past have pushed Mayanists into opposed theoretical camps ... McAnany's principal contribution is her attempt to demonstrate through theoretical innovation why such an integrative approach is justified. With her book, a new chapter in the ongoing dialogue among Mayanists is initiated.' Kevin J. Johnston, Reviews in Anthropology
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