Hostname: page-component-745bb68f8f-b6zl4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2025-02-06T07:40:59.864Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Colonial and Postcolonial Change in Mesoamerica: Archaeology as Historical Anthropology. RANI T. ALEXANDER and SUSAN KEPECS, editors. 2018. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque. xiii + 433 pp., 111 figures, 27 tables. $85.00 (hardcover). ISBN 978-0-8263-5973-5.

Review products

Colonial and Postcolonial Change in Mesoamerica: Archaeology as Historical Anthropology. RANI T. ALEXANDER and SUSAN KEPECS, editors. 2018. University of New Mexico Press, Albuquerque. xiii + 433 pp., 111 figures, 27 tables. $85.00 (hardcover). ISBN 978-0-8263-5973-5.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 August 2019

Jeb J. Card*
Affiliation:
Miami University
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Review
Copyright
Copyright © 2019 by the Society for American Archaeology 

The contributors to this volume are experienced researchers in the historical archaeology of Central America, primarily Mexico. All the chapter authors—Rani T. Alexander, Susan Kepecs, Thomas H. Charlton, Patricia Fournier García, Janine Gasco, Cynthia L. Otis Charlton, Joel W. Palka, and Judith Francis Zeitlin—were led to historical archaeology by Thomas Charlton (to whom the volume is dedicated) and his pioneering work on the historical archaeology of Mexico, which bridged the divide between the deep prehispanic and the “historic” past. Though one might expect a Festschrift, the current volume is instead a statement of theory and practice inspired by Charlton. Although the latter half of the volume presents individual case studies (covering Central Mexico, Tehuantepec, Soconusco, the Lacandonia region stretching into the Petén, and Yucatan), the contributors team up in the chapters of the first half to synthesize broad themes such as identity, religion, and economics. This does lead to some repetition between these synthesis chapters and the case studies in an already voluminous work. The benefit of this approach is a more unified synthetic accounting. Many of the ideas and data presented by these authors mirror contributions elsewhere, but these chapters are some of the most complete, synthetic, and broadly useful presentations of this work. As discussed in the volume's concluding chapter, there is a clear intent to make Colonial and Postcolonial Change a major source and statement on the historical archaeology of Mexico and Central America.

This statement springs from a second inspiration: Fernand Braudel and the Annales school of multiscalar analysis of material and documentary evidence on a world-system scale. The volume aims to break down two conceptual barriers—one chronological, the other methodological. It is successful in its more unique transgressive goal of examining the longue durée trajectory of Mexico from the late prehispanic period through to the early twenty-first century. This approach delivers on the often promised but less commonly delivered potential of historical archaeology to examine the roots of the global system that emerges from European colonialism.

Using this approach, the book critically examines both (to paraphrase Stephen Silliman) the short purée of the initial Spanish–Mesoamerican encounter and the longue dureé, if this latter term is meant to emphasize persistence and cultural survival. Dynamic changes of various scales and speeds intertwine with long-term trends and cultural practices that change, adapt (for example, ongoing recombinant patterning and bricolage eclipse static syncretism in the chapter on religion and ritual by Zeitlin and Palka), and sometimes disappear (deskilling and denovation are major themes of several chapters). In the conclusions, Kepecs and Alexander note that no one theoretical or methodological approach was required of contributors. There is an attempt (in a synthetic chapter by Kepecs and Fournier García and a case study on Yucatan by Kepecs) to apply Kondratieff waves—50- to 60-year cycles of world system boom and bust within larger 150-year hegemonic periods—to Mesoamerica as an organizing principle of the volume. Yet the K-wave approach is not explicitly followed up in most of the contributions, which instead often demonstrate the importance of local conditions on historical trajectories. A study (Kepecs, Fournier García, Alexander, and Otis Charlton) of different approaches to agave plants (resulting in henequen and pulque) in Central Mexico and in Yucatan demonstrates the complex and varied interplay between geographically, chronologically, and socially distinct settings and global economic forces.

However, the broader hegemonic periods echo through a general chronological trajectory that emerges from the synthetic and case study chapters. A Late Postclassic Mesoamerica varying between centralized empire and independent trading cities in the east undergoes an initial century of reorganization after the Spanish invasion. Historical records emphasize congregación, but the material record is mixed, with indigenous agricultural patterns persisting to varying degrees, depending on competition with Spanish economic goals (the role of livestock in indigenous and ladino lifeways is all over the map) and broader economic variables.

The synthetic and case studies generally attest to a subsequent period of colonial and indigenous economic and demographic languishing, loosely contemporary with the rise of the British Empire at the expense of the Spanish. Different regions have their own trajectories in this period, but with the exception of the ethnogenesis of the Lacandon (Palka), indigenous cultural and economic independence declines in this period. The subsequent period of Mexican independence is clearly detected across the board through the transformations wrought by foreign, especially U.S., capital and the subsequent growth in economic inequality leading to the Mexican Revolution. Archaeology is particularly strong here in erasing the informal barrier separating Early Modern/Colonial and Industrial/Republican (from the perspective of Latin America) studies, emphasizing that the economic, social, and landscape reorderings in Mexico were on par with that of the initial Spanish conquest.

The Mexico focus of the volume becomes noticeable in the twentieth century as the revolution and government reforms again change the landscape through strategies that lower economic inequality and decrease foreign dependence, yet trigger longer-term destruction of traditional economic knowledge and landscapes. Finally, a post–NAFTA neoliberal reintroduction of transnational capital leads to social and economic ruin, resulting in displacement and the narco economy. These effects are particularly palpable on the page as the contributors describe their own experiences with changes in the communities they study. Connecting Late Postclassic Mesoamerican society and culture to twenty-first-century globalization in a data-driven and grounded way is an important accomplishment of this volume.

The other major stated aim of the volume—breaking down the barriers between documentary, material, and oral data—is less ambitious and meets with mixed results. Mesoamerican studies have a long history of blending archaeological, ethnohistoric, and ethnographic data, although this volume is explicitly more careful in critically situating ethnohistoric and ethnographic data as changing rather than timeless ideals. Within the volume (I recognize as an archaeologist that this may be my bias), some of the strongest demonstrations of broader themes come from chapters rich in presentation of material evidence, such as changing architectural practices or artifact production, for patterns unattested or in contradiction with the documentary evidence. This is seen in the synthetic chapter on resistance (Alexander, Kepecs, Palka, and Zeitlin) and in the concluding chapter. That same concluding chapter notes that the situational and performative nature of identity favors documentary over material evidence.

Overall, Colonial and Postcolonial Change in Mesoamerica is an important testament of the deeper colonial roots of contemporary problems in Mexico and of the promise of historical archaeology for making the past relevant to the present.