Seeing and Being Seen
The Q'eqchi' Maya of Livingston, Guatemala, and Beyond
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Texas Press
Published:1st Dec '06
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
An ethnographic study of the morality and self-identity of the Q'eqchi' people of Livingston, Guatemala.
The practice of morality and the formation of identity among an indigenous Latin American culture are framed in a pioneering ethnography of sight that attempts to reverse the trend of anthropological fieldwork and theory overshadowing one another.
In this vital and richly detailed work, methodology and theory are treated as complementary partners as the author explores the dynamic Mayan customs of the Q'eqchi' people living in the cultural crossroads of Livingston, Guatemala. Here, Q'eqchi', Ladino, and Garifuna (Caribbean-coast Afro-Indians) societies interact among themselves and with others ranging from government officials to capitalists to contemporary tourists.
The fieldwork explores the politics of sight and incorporates a video camera operated by multiple people—the author and the Q'eqchi' people themselves—to watch unobtrusively the traditions, rituals, and everyday actions that exemplify the long-standing moral concepts guiding the Q'eqchi' in their relationships and tribulations. Sharing the camera lens, as well as the lens of ethnographic authority, allows the author to slip into the world of the Q'eqchi' and capture their moral, social, political, economic, and spiritual constructs shaped by history, ancestry, external forces, and time itself.
A comprehensive history of the Q'eqchi' illustrates how these former plantation laborers migrated to lands far from their Mayan ancestral homes to co-exist as one of several competing cultures, and what impact this had on maintaining continuity in their identities, moral codes of conduct, and perception of the changing outside world.
With the innovative use of visual methods and theories, the author's reflexive, sensory-oriented ethnographic approach makes this a study that itself becomes a reflection of the complex set of social structures embodied in its subject.
"Hilary Kahn presents the readership with an interesting ethnography that defies the "established" methodology and assumptions about scientific objectivism...the introductory presentation of the methodological basis of Kahn's work is followed by ten descriptive and simultaneously analytical chapters...Kahn's book may be certainly read as a conventional ethnography...what makes it unconventional, however, is the author's challenge to the positivist gaze and the simplistic categorization blind to its own cultural and political facets. The book also illustrates in an original way: the photographs are not still pictures but sequences from video recordings that capture and convey actions rather than moments." - Darius J. Piwowarczyk, Anthropos, 2009
ISBN: 9780292714557
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
256 pages