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Deciphering Ontologies: Divination and “Infinition” in Classic Maya Inscriptions
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Metadados
Descrição
In many forms, important trends of current anthropology, like the ontological turn, have been left aside in the analysis of the ancient artistic testimonies of the indigenous people of the Americas, thanks to the inevitable gap and lamentable misunderstandings between ethnology, archaeology and art history. In this text, we retake the notion of "infinition", a term coined by Martin Holbraad in his work about Cuban divination, Truth in Motion (2012), to explore two epigraphic and artistic testimonies from the courts of the Classic Maya period (ad 250-900) and see how what has been seen as mere calendarical manipulation by scheming rulers and elites can be read as ritual acts of divination which created new identities, altered the ontological constitution of their participants and challenged the boundaries of human (and divine) time and space. By reading Maya art à la Roy Wagner, that is, as invention, we want to encourage the very much needed criticism of the tired notion of "justification of power" that seems to pervade Maya Art interpretation among archaeologists and epigraphists.
Colaboradores
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Abrangência
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Autor
Zamora, Alonso
Data
22 de dezembro de 2016
Formato
Identificador
https://www.revistas.usp.br/ra/article/view/124808 | 10.11606/2179-0892.ra.2016.124808
Idioma
Direitos autorais
Copyright (c) 2016 Revista de Antropologia | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
Fonte
Revista de Antropologia; v. 59 n. 3 (2016); 73-89 | Revista de Antropologia; Vol. 59 No 3 (2016); 73-89 | Revista de Antropologia; Vol. 59 Núm. 3 (2016); 73-89 | Revista de Antropologia; Vol. 59 No. 3 (2016); 73-89 | 1678-9857 | 0034-7701
Assuntos
Maya Art | Long Count | Palenque | Maya Epigraphy | Ritual | Power | Divination | Infinition
Tipo
info:eu-repo/semantics/article | info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion