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Memory in Fragments

The Lives of Ancient Maya Sculptures
  • Megan E. O'Neil
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2024
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About this book

An exploration of how the ancient Maya engaged with their history by using, altering, and burying stone sculptures.

For the ancient Maya, monumental stone sculptures were infused with agency. As they were used, reused, altered, and buried, such sculptures retained ceremonial meaning. In Memory in Fragments, Megan E. O'Neil explores how ancient Maya people engaged with history through these sculptures, as well as how they interacted with the stones themselves over the course of the sculptures’ long “lives.” Considering Maya religious practices, historiography, and conceptions of materials and things, O’Neil explores how Maya viewers perceived sculptures that were fragmented, scarred, burned, damaged by enemies, or set in unusual locations. In each case, she demonstrates how different human interactions, amid dynamic religious, political, and historical contexts, led to new episodes in the sculptures' lives.

A rare example of cross-temporal and geographical work in this field, Memory in Fragments both compares sculptures within ancient Maya culture across Honduras, Guatemala, Mexico, and Belize over hundreds of years and reveals how memory may accrue around and be evoked in material remains.

Author / Editor information

Megan E. O'Neil is an assistant professor of art history at Emory University; the author of Engaging Ancient Maya Sculpture at Piedras Negras, Guatemala and The Maya; and the coauthor of a revised edition of Maya Art and Architecture.

Reviews

This magisterial monograph will stand as the benchmark on Maya carved stone monuments as artifacts, joining Tatiana Proskouriakoff’s stylistic seriation of Maya monuments, A Study of Classic Maya Sculpture, published in 1950, as an essential and foundational text in advancing the discipline. Clearly written and finely illustrated, Professor O’Neil’s narrative contextualizes stone sculptures as, from the vantage of their ancient and contemporary makers and users, living participants in shaping the past, present, and future, no matter their condition.
— David Freidel, Washington University in St. Louis, coeditor of Ancient Maya Political Economies

Megan E. O’Neil’s book is a timely and significant intervention in Maya art historical studies. Previous scholarship has often focused on iconography and the extraction of meaning from texts rather than the lives of the objects upon which such images and inscriptions are found. In contrast, O’Neil examines what sculptures do and the landscape of memory that they affect, demonstrating the complex ways in which monuments were reused and why this is critical for understanding their role in Maya culture.
— Michael Carrasco, Florida State University, co-editor of Under the Shade of Thipaak: The Ethnoecology of Cycads in Mesoamerica and the Caribbean


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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
July 2, 2024
eBook ISBN:
9781477329405
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
280
Other:
216 color & b/w photos
Downloaded on 13.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.7560/329399/html
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