Evolution of Ceramic Production Organization in a Maya Community
Evolution of Ceramic Production Organization in a Maya Community
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Author(s): Arnold, Dean E.
ISBN No.: 9781607323136
Pages: 352
Year: 201408
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 106.40
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

"Arnold has now prepared a compelling companion to his 2008 volume, making a quartet of salient publications about pottery and pottery-producing communities. In his new work he blends meticulous diachronic field research with keen insight and documents a substantive theoretical foundation. He draws together the results of many of his previous works, reevaluates and expands upon them, and offers fresh, new cogent analyses and explanations of the dramatic changes that have taken place in the pottery-making community through more than four decades." -- The Society for Archaeological Sciences Bulletin "This is an outstanding volume that constitutes a major contribution not only to Maya research but to Mesoamerican studies as a whole. Written by a prominent anthropologist and specialist in the study of ceramics, it is remarkable for both the breadth and depth of its research. This book is an original contribution to the general field of cultural anthropology and, more specifically, to archaeology; one that deserves a place on the bookshelves of sociocultural anthropologists, archaeologists, and scholars in related fields, as well as all readers with an interest in the fascinating world of Maya culture, both ancient and modern." --Eduardo Williams, Ph.D.


, El Colegio de Michoacán, Zamora, Mexico "Once upon a time, anthropologists embraced the broad study of humankind in the past and present, not merely as a disciplinary stance, but personally in their own work. In his half-century learning about and from the potters of Ticul, Yucatán Dean Arnold has transcended the growing divide between archaeology and sociocultural anthropology in ways few can now claim. Meticulously documented and richly illustrated, The Evolution of Ceramic Production Organization in a Maya Community shows how decisions made by individuals and households in the historical context of changing economic and social conditions in Yucatán affected the intensity, organization and spatial configuration of ceramic production. This book deserves a place next to Arnold's Social Change and the Evolution of Ceramic Production and Distribution in a May a Community on the bookshelf of everyone who is seriously interested in how craft traditions originate, change, and are transmitted across generations." --Christopher Pool, University of Kentucky.


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