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KA'KAW POTS AND COMMON CONTAINERS: CREATING HISTORIES AND COLLECTIVE MEMORIES AMONG THE CLASSIC MAYA OF XUNANTUNICH, BELIZE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 July 2011

Lisa J. LeCount*
Affiliation:
University of Alabama, Department of Anthropology, 19 ten Hoor Hall, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0210
*
E-mail correspondence to: llecount@tenhoor.as.ua.edu

Abstract

Reconstruction of foodways at the Lowland Maya center of Xunantunich, Belize, illustrates how commensality is fundamental to the construction of multilayered identities. Collective memory and linear histories form the foundation of identities because they are the mental frameworks people use to construct shared pasts. At Xunantunich, community identity was expressed though pottery and practices associated with the preparation of foods for domestic consumption and public offerings. In a world of natural cycles centered on family reproduction, horticultural activities, and yearly ceremonies, these symbols and rituals structured the lives of all people and embodied within them a collective memory of community. Linear histories were recorded in images and texts on drinking paraphernalia that were likely used for toasting honored individuals, ancestors, or gods during commemorative rites. These inscriptions and bodily practices marked individuals and their houses as people and places of prominence with separate identities.

Type
Special Section: Current Perspectives on Social Memory
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2011

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