• Title of article

    IMAGINING COURTLY COMMU CERAMIC VESSELSNITIES: AN EXPLORATION OF CLASSIC MAYA EXPERIENCES OF STATUS AND IDENTITY THROUGH PAINTED

  • Author/Authors

    Jackson، Sarah E نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    71
  • To page
    85
  • Abstract
    Painted ceramic vessels of the Late Classic Maya, depicting scenes of the royal court, provide an entry into understanding the courtly community as an institution built on relationships and embodied through lived practice. By examining these ceramics both as circulating objects, representing the materialized form of courtly values, and as vehicles for imagery that conveys idealized representations of the court hierarchy and how it was enacted, archaeologists may more profoundly integrate material and iconographic investigations. Assertions of identity and status are examined through the ways in which they are “contained” by these decorated vessels and emerge as characterized by a series of simultaneous unifications and oppositions. A focus on bodily behaviors and interactions, and the ways in which objects played courtly roles in their own right, yields an animated understanding of a dynamic court and a larger perspective on the enactment of identity and difference in Classic Maya contexts.
  • Journal title
    Ancient Mesoamerica
  • Serial Year
    2009
  • Journal title
    Ancient Mesoamerica
  • Record number

    652271