Title: ETHNOGRAPHY SEMINAR: CENTRAL AMERICA
1ETHNOGRAPHY SEMINAR CENTRAL AMERICA
- Helsinki University
- Fall 2003
- Toomas Gross
2- Times Wed 12-14
- Location U40 ls 12
- Instructor Toomas Gross
- Email toomas.gross_at_helsinki.fi
- Phone (09) 19122645
- Office Hours Thurs 11-12, E309
3On terminology (I)
- Central America Mexico, Belize and six other
republics - Latin America
- coined by the French in the 1860s
- 24 political entities
- culturally, linguistically and religiously
defined - North America US, Canada ( Mexico?) gt NAFTA
- Hispano-America or Hispanic America
- Vs Anglo-America or Luso-America
4On terminology (II)
- Ibero-America
- Hispano- Luso-America
- Central America
- Traditionally - cinco repúblicas (Guatemala,
Honduras, Nicaragua, El Salvador and Costa Rica) - United Provinces of Central America in 1823-1838
- Hence does not include Panama, Belize or Mexico
5On terminology (III)
- Middle America
- Central America plus the Caribbean and the
Antilles - i.e. what lies between North and South America
- Mesoamerica
- a cultural term
- coined by Paul Kirchhoff in 1943
- based on geographical limits, ethnic composition,
and cultural characteristics
6On terminology (IV)
- Luso-America Portuguese America
- Franco-America
- Haiti Guadeloupe, Martinique, and French Guiana
( Quebec)
7Seminar requirements
- 8-10 page research paper on a selected topic
- 15-20 minute presentation
- topic to be chosen by 24.09
- research paper to other seminar participants a
week prior to their presentation - presentation based on one ethnography and linking
it with other seminar readings.
8Readings
- Required readings (2 articles per seminar)
- Readings for presentation
- (1 monograph/ethnography per student)
- Additional readings (optional)
92. History of anthropological research in Central
America (24.09)
- Beals, R., R. Redfield S. Tax 1943.
Anthropological Research Problems with Reference
to the Contemporary Peoples of Mexico and
Guatemala. In American Anthropologist 45, pp.
1-21. - Hewitt de Alcántara, Cynthia 1984. Conclusions.
In Anthropological perspectives on rural Mexico.
London Routledge.
103. Socio-political organization of rural
communities (1.10)
- Communal identity, cargo system, social
organization, social relationships, caciquismo,
compadrazgo - Carrasco, P. E. 1961. The Civil-Religious
Hierarchy in Mesoamerican Communities
Pre-Spanish Background and Colonial Development.
In American Anthropologist 63, pp. 483-497. - Chance, J. K. 1990. Changes in Twentieth-Century
Mesoamerican Cargo Systems. In Class, Politics
and Popular Religion in Mexico and Central
America (eds) L. Stephen J. Dow. Washington,
D.C. American Anthropology Association.
114. Ethnicity and indigenous groups (8.10)
- Ethnic identity, inter-ethnic relations, ethnic
groups and boundaries - Diskin, M. 2001. Ethnic Discourse and the
Challenge to Anthropology The Nicaraguan Case.
Urban, G. and J. Sherzer Nation-States and
Indians in Latin America. Austin University of
Texas Press. - Medina, L. 2003. History, Culture, and
Place-Making Native Status and Maya Identity
in Belize. In Gutmann, M. et al (eds)
Perspectives on Las Américas A Reader in
Culture, History, and Representation. Oxford
Blackwell.
125. Peasantry, poverty, class (15.10)
- Land, peasantry, class, culture of poverty
- Hewitt de Alcántara, Cynthia 1984. Cultural
Ecology, Marxism and the Development of a Theory
of a Peasantry, 1950-1970. In Anthropological
perspectives on rural Mexico. London Routledge. - Wolf, Eric R. 1955. Types of Latin American
Peasantry A Preliminary Discussion. American
Anthropologist 57, pp. 452-71.
136. Nations and nationalism (22.10)
- Nation-building, collective symbols, national
identity, multiculturalism, mestizaje - Stavenhagen, R. 2002. Indigenous Peoples and the
State in Latin America An Ongoing Debate. In R.
Sieder (ed.) Multiculturalism in Latin America
Indigenous Rights, Diversity and Democracy. New
York Palgrave Macmillan. - Wolf, E. 1979. The Virgin of Guadalupe. In
Lessa W., and E. Vogt (eds) Reader in Comparative
Religion An Anthropological Approach. Boston,
MA Addison-Wesley.
147. Conflict and violence (29.10)
- State, violence, ethnocide, land conflicts
- Edelman, M. 2003. A Central American Genocide
Rubber, Slavery, Nationalism, and the Destruction
of the Guatusos-Malekus. In Gutmann, M. - Stephen, L. 2003. The Construction of Indigenous
Suspects Militarization and the Gendered and
Ethnic Dynamics of Human Rights Abuses in
Southern Mexico. In Gutmann, M..
158. Ethnic resistance and indigenous movements
(5.11)
- Human rights, social mobilization, social
movements, Guatemala, Chiapas - Adams, R. N. 2001. Strategies of Ethnic Survival
in Central America. In Urban, G. and J. Sherzer
Nation-States and Indians in Latin America.
Austin University of Texas Press. - Stephen, L. 1990. The Politics of Ritual The
Mexican State and Zapotec Autonomy, 1926-1989. In
Class, Politics and Popular Religion in Mexico
and Central America (eds) L. Stephen J. Dow.
Washington, D.C. American Anthropology
Association.
169. Politics of gender (12.11)
- Machismo, marianismo, social movements, womens
organizations - Duvalos, K. 2003. La Quinceañera Making Gender
and Ethnic Identities. In Gutmann, M. et al
Perspectives on Las Américas A Reader in
Culture, History, and Representation. Oxford
Blackwell. - Navarro, M 2002. Against Marianismo. In R.
Montoya, L. Frazier, and J. Hurtig (eds) Genders
Place Feminist Anthropologies of Latin America.
New York Palgrave Macmillan.
1710. Popular religion and religious change (19.11)
- (Folk) Catholicism, syncretism, ritual,
Evangelical Protestantism - Higgins, M. J. 1990. Martyrs and Virgins
Popular Religion in Mexico and Nicaragua. In
Class, Politics and Popular Religion in Mexico
and Central America (eds) L. Stephen J. Dow.
Washington, D.C. American Anthropology
Association. - Dow, J., and L. Stephen 1990. The Dynamics of
Religion in Middle American Communities. In
Class, Politics and Popular Religion in Mexico
and Central America (eds) L. Stephen J. Dow.
Washington, D.C. American Anthropology
Association.
1811. Globalization, dependency and social change
(26.11)
- US-Central America relations, dependencia,
neo-colonialism, democratization, migration - Cantú, L. 2003. A Place Called Home A Queer
Political Economy of Mexican Immigrant Mens
Experiences. In Gutmann, M. et al Perspectives on
Las Américas A Reader in Culture, History, and
Representation. Oxford Blackwell. - Gutmann, M. 2003. For Whom the Taco Bells Toll
Popular Responses to NAFTA South of the Border.
In Gutmann, M. et al Perspectives on Las
Américas A Reader in Culture, History, and
Representation. Oxford Blackwell.
19Texts for presentation (3)
- Socio-political organization of rural communities
(1.10) - Lewis, Oscar 1963 1951. Life in a Mexican
Village Tepoztlán Restudied. Urbana University
of Illinois Press. - Nader, L. 1990. Harmony Ideology Justice and
Control in a Zapotec Mountain Village. Stanford
Stanford University Press. - Redfield, Robert 1973 1930. Tepoztlán A
Mexican Village. Chicago University of Chicago
Press. - Vogt, E. Z. 1969. Zinacantan A Maya Community in
the Highlands of Chiapas. Cambridge, Mass.
Harvard University Press.
20Texts for presentation (4)
- Ethnicity and indigenous groups (8.10)
- Faust, B. 1999. Mexican Rural Development and the
Plumed Serpent Technology and Maya Cosmology in
the Tropical Forest of Campeche, Mexico.
Westport Bergin Garvey. - Friedlander, J. 1975. Being Indian in Hueyapan A
Study of Forced Identity in Contemporary Mexico.
New York St. Martins Press. - Lipp, F. J. 1998. The Mixe of Oaxaca Religion,
Ritual, and Healing. Austin University of Texas
Press. - Sandstrom, A. R. 1991. Corn is Our Blood Culture
and Ethnic Identity in a Contemporary Aztec
Indian Village. Oklahoma City University of
Oklahoma Press.
21Texts for presentation (5)
- Peasantry, poverty, class (15.10)
-
- Cancian, Frank 1972. Change and Uncertainty in a
Peasant Economy The Maya Corn Farmers of
Zinacantan. Stanford, CA Stanford University
Press. - Foster, G. M. 1979 1967. Tzintzuntzan Mexican
Peasants in a Changing World. New York Elsevier
(Pages TBA) - Redfield, R. 1967. Peasant Society and Culture.
Chicago University of Chicago Press. - Tax, S. 1953. Penny Capitalism A Guatemalan
Indian Economy. Washington, D.C. Smithsonian
Institution, Institute for Social Anthropology.
22Texts for presentation (6)
- Nation and nationalism (22.10)
-
- Turner, F. C. 1968. The Dynamic of Mexican
Nationalism. Chapel Hill The University of North
Carolina Press. - Vasconcelos, J. 1979 1925. La Raza Cósmica /
The Cosmic Race. Baltimore The Johns Hopkins
University Press.
23Texts for presentation (7)
- Conflict and violence (29.10)
- Berryman, P. 1994. Stubborn Hope Religion,
Politics, and Revolution in Central America. New
York Orbis Books / The New Press. - Dennis, P. 1987. Intervillage Conflict in Oaxaca.
New Brunswick London Rutgers University Press. - Romanucci-Ross, L. 1986 1973. Conflict,
Violence and Morality in a Mexican Village.
Chicago University of Chicago Press.
24Texts for presentation (8)
- Ethnic resistance and social movements (5.11)
- Campbell, H. 1994. Zapotec Resistance Ethnic
Politics and Cultural Revivalism in Southern
Mexico. Albuquerque University of New Mexico. - Collier, G., and E. Lowery Quaratiello 1999.
Basta! Land and the Zapatista Rebellion in
Chiapas. Oakland Food First Books. - Harvey, N. 1998. The Chiapas Rebellion The
Struggle for Land and Democracy. Durham Duke
University Press.
25Texts for presentation (9)
- Politics of gender (12.11)
- Gutmann, M.C. 1996. The Meanings of Macho Being
a Man in Mexico City. Berkeley University of
California Press. - Lancaster, R. 1994. Life Is Hard Machismo,
Danger, and the Intimacy of Power in Nicaragua.
Berkeley University of California Press. - Stephen, L. 1991. Zapotec Women. Austin
University of Texas Press.
26Texts for presentation (10)
- Popular religion and religious change (19.11)
- Brandes, S. H. 1988. Power and Persuasion
Fiestas and Social Control in Rural Mexico.
Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press. - Falla, R. 2001. Quiché Rebelde Religious
Conversion, Politics and Ethnic Identity in
Guatemala. Austin University of Texas Press. - Garrard-Burnett, V. 1998. Protestantism in
Guatemala Living in the New Jerusalem. Austin
University of Texas Press.
27Texts for presentation (11)
- Globalization, dependency and social change
(26.11) - Buckley, R. 1999. Central America Wrestling with
US Power. Cheltenham Understanding Global
Issues. - Bulmer-Thomas, V., and J. Dunkerley 1999. The
United States and Latin America The New Agenda.
London Institute of Latin American Studies
(selected articles).
28Central America as a culture area(I)
- a heterogeneous region, because
- Mexico - big and relatively rich, others small
and poor - Mexico - 3000 km borderline with the US and NAFTA
- Panama canal
- Ethnic differences (eg. Guatemala vs Costa Rica)
- Socioeconomic differences (Mexico vs others)
- Political differences (Costa Rica the only
democracy)
29Central America as a culture area (II)
- a cultural whole, because
- Similar political history (except Belize)
- most formed part of Viceroyalty of Spain
- independence in the early 19th century
- Economic similarities
- plantation agriculture
- Similar cultural and social characteristics
- Indigenous ethnic groups
- Human rights issues
- Catholicism
- Similar geopolitical and strategic position
- Dependence on the US, migration
30Regional analysis" in anthropology
- two different meanings
- regional comparison, i.e studying and comparing
cultures within a region - study of a region as a structural or dynamic
system, with different social or cultural units
interacting (eg. Studies of colonialism, Marxist
analyses, dependency theory)
31Diffusionism
- spread of cultural traits through contact and
borrowing - 1) British school - G. Elliot Smith, Haddon,
William J. Perry, W. H. R. Rivers - heliocentric (Egypt)
- 2) German-Austrian or Kulturkreis School
Friedrich Ratzel, Fritz Graebner, Wilhelm
Schmidt - Egypt, Mesopotamia, China, India and Mexico
- 2) ) US School Clark Wissler and Alfred Kroeber
- culture area environmental zone
- Age-area principle
32Historical periodization (I)
- Paleoindian (?18,000-10,000 BC)
- initial population of the New World via the
Bering Land Bridge - dramatic climate changes
- Archaic (10,000 - ca. 3000 BC)
- mobile, band-level societies
- trend for sedentism on coasts
33Historical periodization (II)
- Early Preclassic (3000 BC - 1000 BC) Early
Formative - appearance of permanent villages and later large
chiefdoms - cultivation of maize, beans, and squash
- Olmec culture (flourished around 1150 BC, San
Lorenzo, chiefdom-level societies ) - Middle Preclassic (ca. 1000-400 BC) Middle
Formative - spread of religious traditions related to Olmec
culture - trend towards political centralization
- San Lorenzo is abandoned, La Venta, Tres Zapotes,
and Laguna de los Cerros grow
34Historical periodization (III)
- Late Preclassic (400 BC to ca. AD 100) Late
Formative - beginnings of early state-level societies
- centers in the Valley of Mexico, highland
Chiapas, the Gulf Coast, and the Maya area - invention of writing systems
- Maya ceremonialism based on the observation of
celestial events - Protoclassic (AD 100 - 200)
- major shifts in the power of individual ritual
centers
35Historical periodization (IV)
- Early Classic (AD 200 - 600)
- the rise of Teotihuacan civilization
- appearance of dynastic records with Long Count
dates in the Maya area - ruling dynasties at sites like Tikal, Calakmul,
Palenque, Yaxchilán, and Copán - Zapotec civilization at Monte Alban in Oaxaca
- Late Classic (AD 600 - 900)
- Teotihuacan suffers from a dramatic decline
- Maya civilization in Petén, Chiapas, western
Honduras, and Yucatán - Palenque, Yaxchilán, Copán, Dos Pilas, and
Chichén Itzá Uxmal
36Historical periodization (V)
- Epiclassic (AD 800 - 1000)
- "collapse" of Classic Maya culture in the
southern lowlands - flourishing of Maya culture in the northern
lowlands (the Yucatán Peninsula). - Cholula, Cacaxtla, and Xochicalco in Central
Mexico - Early Postclassic (AD 1000-1300)
- the rise of Toltec culture (Tula)
- Late Postclassic (AD 1300-1519)
- Aztec dominance (Tenochtitlán and Tlatelolco)
37Colonial era (1519 early 19th c.)
- Belize independence in 1981
- Tzvetan Todorov on the conquest and otherness
- Theological disputes - Bartolomé de las Casas
- Particularity of Spanish and Portuguese
colonialism - obedezco pero no cumplo
- Encomienda system and repatrimiento
- The spread of Catholicism
- Administrative changes
38Post-colonial era
- Simon Bolivars dream of United Latin America
- United Provinces of Central America in 1823
- Monroe's doctrine "America to the Americans
- Nationalism and creation of national identity
(religion, national symbols) - Economic dependence on the US and Europe (UFCO
etc)