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Watching Lacandon Maya Lives

Second Edition

R. Jon McGee

Although romanticized as the last of the ancient Maya living isolated in the forest, several generations of the Lacandon Maya have had their lives shaped by the international oil economy, tourism, and political unrest.

Watching Lacandon Maya Lives is an examination of dramatic cultural changes in a Maya rainforest farming community over the last forty years, including changes to their families, industries, religion, health and healing practices, and gender roles. The book contains several discussions of anthropological theory in accessible, jargon-free language, including how the use of different theoretical perspectives impacts an ethnographer’s fieldwork experience. While relating his own mishaps, experiences of community strife, and conflicts, Jon McGee encourages students to shed the romantic veil through which ethnographies are usually viewed and think more deeply about how events in our own lives influence how we understand the behavior of people around us.

New to the Second Edition:

  • Revised Introduction incorporates the author’s recent work with the Lacandon and discussions of anthropological writing, culture theory, and how events in the author’s personal life have changed his approach to anthropological fieldwork.
  • Revised chapter, “Finding an Income in the Lacandon Jungle” focuses on families who have shifted from a subsistence farming economy to earning revenue by renting facilities to tourists, owning small community stores, working as hired labor for archaeologists, or make use of a variety of government rural aid programs created in the last two decades (Chapter 5).
  • New chapter, “Forty Years Among the Lacandon: Some Lessons Learned,” discusses what the author’s 40 years of experience as an ethnographer has taught him about the discipline of anthropology and the concept of culture (Chapter 8)

  • Details
  • Details
  • Author
  • Author
  • TOC
  • TOC
  • Reviews
  • Reviews
  • Features
  • Features
  • Resources
  • Resources
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 230 • Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-5381-2616-5 • Hardback • February 2023 • $90.00 • (£69.00)
978-1-5381-2617-2 • Paperback • February 2023 • $32.00 • (£25.00)
978-1-5381-2618-9 • eBook • February 2023 • $30.50 • (£25.00)
Subjects: Social Science / Anthropology / Cultural, Social Science / Anthropology / General, Social Science / Women's Studies, Social Science / World / Latin America
Courses: Anthropology; Cultural & Social; General, Anthropology; Cultural & Social; Social, International & Area Studies; Latin American Studies; General, Anthropology; Peoples & Cultures; Latin America

Reece Jon McGee is a professor of Anthropology at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. He is the author of numerous works on the Lacandon including Life, Ritual and Religion Among the Lacandon Maya and is also the coauthor of the texts Anthropological Theory: An Introductory History (Rowman and Littlefield), Sacred Realms: Essays in Religious Practices, Beliefs and Culture (Oxford University Press), and Introduction to Cultural Anthropology: An Interactive Approach (National Social Science Press). McGee is also the managing editor for Theory in Social and Cultural Anthropology: An Encyclopedia (Sage Publishing Company).

Introduction

Chapter One: The Myth of Lacandon Origins.

Romantic Images

Archaeological, Linguistic, and Historical Sources.

Sixteenth-Seventeenth Centuries: Chol-LacandonEighteenth Century: Yucatec Lacandon

Lacandon in the Nineteenth Century

Lacandon in the Twentieth Century

Lacandon 1980-2015

Chapter Two: Reconstructing the Historical Lacandon:

Who Is Lacandon?

What Does Traditional Lacandon Mean?

Lacandon Life from 1790-1903

Men and Women’s Work

Religion

Marriage and Household Life

Selling Lacandon Religion

Two Case Studies and Concluding Thoughts

So, How Can I Write About “the Lacandon”?

Chapter 3: Watching Life in a Lacandon Community

An Overview of Women, Men, and Work.

Women’s Work

Men's Work

Family Examples

Chan K?in Viejo and his Household

Koh III and Koh IV, Summer1985

Child Birth, and Infant Mortality

The Death of Nuk

Chapter 4: 1970-2020, Five Decades of Change

Government, Oil and Immigration, an Overview

Family Relations, Work, and Historic Lacandon Horticulture

Roads, Bows and Arrows, and Tourism

Adapting Agricultural to Tourism: Comparing Two Communities

Men, tourism, and Agriculture in Nahá.

Agriculture and Tourism in Lacanha.

Women, Tourism, and Work

“Traditional” women

Women in households oriented to tourism

Widows

Chapter 5: Finding an Income in the Lacandon Jungle

Providing Food and Lodging for Visitors

Household-Level Entrepreneurial Activities

Archaeology in Mensäbäk

Working for CONANP

Four Families in Mensäbäk

Economic and Cultural Changes

Shifting to a Money-Based Economy and Culture Change

Changing diet and health

Changing household-based reciprocity

Changing status

Changing household demographics

Growing Up in a Changing World: The Cases of K?in and Chan K?in Quinto

Chapter 6: Decline of Non-Christian Religion

Cosmology

Ritual Places: Classic Period Ruins

Caves and Rock Shelters

God Houses

Ritual Implements

Types of Offerings

Edible Offerings

Ritual and Agriculture

Healing and Ritual

The End of the World

Conclusions: The End of Non-Christian Religion

Chapter 7: Changing Healing Practices

Lacandon Categories of Sickness

Curing Through Prayer

Therapeutic Incantations

Curing Strings

Medicinal Plants

Decline of Healing Rituals

Chapter Eight: Forty Years Among the Lacandon: Some Lessons Learned

What is Lacandon Culture?

What People Say is Different from What They Do

Marriage, Fatherhood, and McGee’s Position in the Community

The Fire: 6/9/99

Glossary References Cited

Watching Lacandon Maya Lives presents a pithy account of the northern Lacandones written from the heart of a scholar who demystifies truths of a hitherto enigmatic people, candidly and unapologetically inserting himself into the narrative. As such, the book should appeal to the general reader and anyone else who is captivated by the Mayans past and present.


— Suzanne Cook, University of Victoria


Watching Lacandón Lives highlights the lucid observations that Jon McGee gleaned from decades of research among Lacandón Maya families in Mexico’s tropical rainforest. Through his perceptive description of continuing change in Lacandón communities—and within himself—he has produced a book filled with friendship, insight, and authenticity.


— James D. Nations, author of Lacandón Maya: The Language and Environment


After the exceptional first edition of Watching Lacandon Maya Lives, anthropologist Jon McGee returns with an even more enduring and insightful text reflecting on his forty years of ethnographic work in a Lacandan community. In this engaging work, readers are taken on a journey through the lives of three generations of one large extended family in the community of Nahá and through the author’s personal, informal-yet-academically driven writing style, witness the transformative social change in one indigenous culture. From an economy based upon swidden horticulture to one based upon a mixed economy of tourism and government aid, this text offers an insightful view on how economic changes can have sweeping ramifications felt over time, and on multiple levels of cultural practice. McGee draws upon his ethnographic field experience and invites readers in to discover, as he did, how it is that who we are, what we experience, informs how we understand and interact those with whom we share the world.


— Bonnie Hewlett, Washington State University


McGee's second edition to Watching Lacandon Maya Lives provides an honest and valuable insight into Lacandon lifeways from the past to the present. Through the description of his personal experience among three generations of one extended family in a Lacandon village, the author shows how the natives adapted to cultural and environmental changes, underlining the importance of extensive anthropological field work and personal commitment.


— Alice Balsanelli, Centro de Estudios Mayas of Mexico City


In this new edition, McGee invites readers to consider the nature of social change as he reflects on more than 40 years of fieldwork among Lacandon Maya families. Ethnographically driven, theoretically informed, and accessibly written, the text offers a welcome update to an anthropological classic.


— Ruth Gomberg-Muñoz, Loyola University Chicago


Watching Lacandon Maya Lives, 2e is the best detailed treatise of Northern Lacandon Maya domestic life and social interaction in rural Chiapas, Mexico to date. McGee’s long-term and thoughtful insights on field research, cultural interpretations, gender issues, social change, and people’s individual perspectives and actions make Watching Lacandon Maya Lives anthropologically significant. I very much recommend this book to anyone wanting to learn more about Lacandon Maya society and the discipline of anthropology.


— Joel W. Palka, Arizona State University


The revised edition of Watching Lacandon Maya Lives will be useful to scholars and students as an honest introduction to the realities of anthropological fieldwork: the early awkwardness of entering a new environment and living among people who hold a different vision of the universe and the delight, frustration, and self-doubts that come from watching other people’s lives and trying to understand why they act the way they do. Most importantly, McGee describes how he, as an anthropologist and an individual, has reacted to the lessons of field research and how those lessons have affected his work and life. In highlighting the changes he has witnessed during four decades of watching Lacandón Maya lives, and in acknowledging the changes he has observed in himself, McGee has brought us a book filled with insight, understanding, and authenticity.


— Indigenous Religious Traditions


9/19/23, Faculti: Mcgee discussed the cultural changes in the Maya rainforest farming community over the last forty years.

Link: https://faculti.net/watching-lacandon-maya-lives/



New features
  • Revised Introduction incorporates the author’s recent work with the Lacandon and discussions of anthropological writing, culture theory, and how events in the author’s personal life have changed his approach to anthropological fieldwork.
  • Revised chapter, “Finding an Income in the Lacandon Jungle” focuses on families who have shifted from a subsistence farming economy to earning revenue by renting facilities to tourists, owning small community stores, working as hired labor for archaeologists, or make use of a variety of government rural aid programs created in the last two decades (Chapter 5).
  • New chapter, “Forty Years Among the Lacandon: Some Lessons Learned,” discusses what the author’s 40 years of experience as an ethnographer has taught him about the discipline of anthropology and the concept of culture (Chapter 8)



FOR PROFESSORS
Ancillary Materials are available for this title. For access to these professor use only materials, please Sign-In if you are a registered user, or Register then email us at rltextbooks@bloomsbury.com
Lecture Notes. The Lecture Notes provide the tables and figures from the text.

Watching Lacandon Maya Lives

Second Edition

Cover Image
Hardback
Paperback
eBook
Summary
Summary
  • Although romanticized as the last of the ancient Maya living isolated in the forest, several generations of the Lacandon Maya have had their lives shaped by the international oil economy, tourism, and political unrest.

    Watching Lacandon Maya Lives is an examination of dramatic cultural changes in a Maya rainforest farming community over the last forty years, including changes to their families, industries, religion, health and healing practices, and gender roles. The book contains several discussions of anthropological theory in accessible, jargon-free language, including how the use of different theoretical perspectives impacts an ethnographer’s fieldwork experience. While relating his own mishaps, experiences of community strife, and conflicts, Jon McGee encourages students to shed the romantic veil through which ethnographies are usually viewed and think more deeply about how events in our own lives influence how we understand the behavior of people around us.

    New to the Second Edition:

    • Revised Introduction incorporates the author’s recent work with the Lacandon and discussions of anthropological writing, culture theory, and how events in the author’s personal life have changed his approach to anthropological fieldwork.
    • Revised chapter, “Finding an Income in the Lacandon Jungle” focuses on families who have shifted from a subsistence farming economy to earning revenue by renting facilities to tourists, owning small community stores, working as hired labor for archaeologists, or make use of a variety of government rural aid programs created in the last two decades (Chapter 5).
    • New chapter, “Forty Years Among the Lacandon: Some Lessons Learned,” discusses what the author’s 40 years of experience as an ethnographer has taught him about the discipline of anthropology and the concept of culture (Chapter 8)

Details
Details
  • Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
    Pages: 230 • Trim: 6¼ x 9½
    978-1-5381-2616-5 • Hardback • February 2023 • $90.00 • (£69.00)
    978-1-5381-2617-2 • Paperback • February 2023 • $32.00 • (£25.00)
    978-1-5381-2618-9 • eBook • February 2023 • $30.50 • (£25.00)
    Subjects: Social Science / Anthropology / Cultural, Social Science / Anthropology / General, Social Science / Women's Studies, Social Science / World / Latin America
    Courses: Anthropology; Cultural & Social; General, Anthropology; Cultural & Social; Social, International & Area Studies; Latin American Studies; General, Anthropology; Peoples & Cultures; Latin America
Author
Author
  • Reece Jon McGee is a professor of Anthropology at Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas. He is the author of numerous works on the Lacandon including Life, Ritual and Religion Among the Lacandon Maya and is also the coauthor of the texts Anthropological Theory: An Introductory History (Rowman and Littlefield), Sacred Realms: Essays in Religious Practices, Beliefs and Culture (Oxford University Press), and Introduction to Cultural Anthropology: An Interactive Approach (National Social Science Press). McGee is also the managing editor for Theory in Social and Cultural Anthropology: An Encyclopedia (Sage Publishing Company).

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Introduction

    Chapter One: The Myth of Lacandon Origins.

    Romantic Images

    Archaeological, Linguistic, and Historical Sources.

    Sixteenth-Seventeenth Centuries: Chol-LacandonEighteenth Century: Yucatec Lacandon

    Lacandon in the Nineteenth Century

    Lacandon in the Twentieth Century

    Lacandon 1980-2015

    Chapter Two: Reconstructing the Historical Lacandon:

    Who Is Lacandon?

    What Does Traditional Lacandon Mean?

    Lacandon Life from 1790-1903

    Men and Women’s Work

    Religion

    Marriage and Household Life

    Selling Lacandon Religion

    Two Case Studies and Concluding Thoughts

    So, How Can I Write About “the Lacandon”?

    Chapter 3: Watching Life in a Lacandon Community

    An Overview of Women, Men, and Work.

    Women’s Work

    Men's Work

    Family Examples

    Chan K?in Viejo and his Household

    Koh III and Koh IV, Summer1985

    Child Birth, and Infant Mortality

    The Death of Nuk

    Chapter 4: 1970-2020, Five Decades of Change

    Government, Oil and Immigration, an Overview

    Family Relations, Work, and Historic Lacandon Horticulture

    Roads, Bows and Arrows, and Tourism

    Adapting Agricultural to Tourism: Comparing Two Communities

    Men, tourism, and Agriculture in Nahá.

    Agriculture and Tourism in Lacanha.

    Women, Tourism, and Work

    “Traditional” women

    Women in households oriented to tourism

    Widows

    Chapter 5: Finding an Income in the Lacandon Jungle

    Providing Food and Lodging for Visitors

    Household-Level Entrepreneurial Activities

    Archaeology in Mensäbäk

    Working for CONANP

    Four Families in Mensäbäk

    Economic and Cultural Changes

    Shifting to a Money-Based Economy and Culture Change

    Changing diet and health

    Changing household-based reciprocity

    Changing status

    Changing household demographics

    Growing Up in a Changing World: The Cases of K?in and Chan K?in Quinto

    Chapter 6: Decline of Non-Christian Religion

    Cosmology

    Ritual Places: Classic Period Ruins

    Caves and Rock Shelters

    God Houses

    Ritual Implements

    Types of Offerings

    Edible Offerings

    Ritual and Agriculture

    Healing and Ritual

    The End of the World

    Conclusions: The End of Non-Christian Religion

    Chapter 7: Changing Healing Practices

    Lacandon Categories of Sickness

    Curing Through Prayer

    Therapeutic Incantations

    Curing Strings

    Medicinal Plants

    Decline of Healing Rituals

    Chapter Eight: Forty Years Among the Lacandon: Some Lessons Learned

    What is Lacandon Culture?

    What People Say is Different from What They Do

    Marriage, Fatherhood, and McGee’s Position in the Community

    The Fire: 6/9/99

    Glossary References Cited

Reviews
Reviews
  • Watching Lacandon Maya Lives presents a pithy account of the northern Lacandones written from the heart of a scholar who demystifies truths of a hitherto enigmatic people, candidly and unapologetically inserting himself into the narrative. As such, the book should appeal to the general reader and anyone else who is captivated by the Mayans past and present.


    — Suzanne Cook, University of Victoria


    Watching Lacandón Lives highlights the lucid observations that Jon McGee gleaned from decades of research among Lacandón Maya families in Mexico’s tropical rainforest. Through his perceptive description of continuing change in Lacandón communities—and within himself—he has produced a book filled with friendship, insight, and authenticity.


    — James D. Nations, author of Lacandón Maya: The Language and Environment


    After the exceptional first edition of Watching Lacandon Maya Lives, anthropologist Jon McGee returns with an even more enduring and insightful text reflecting on his forty years of ethnographic work in a Lacandan community. In this engaging work, readers are taken on a journey through the lives of three generations of one large extended family in the community of Nahá and through the author’s personal, informal-yet-academically driven writing style, witness the transformative social change in one indigenous culture. From an economy based upon swidden horticulture to one based upon a mixed economy of tourism and government aid, this text offers an insightful view on how economic changes can have sweeping ramifications felt over time, and on multiple levels of cultural practice. McGee draws upon his ethnographic field experience and invites readers in to discover, as he did, how it is that who we are, what we experience, informs how we understand and interact those with whom we share the world.


    — Bonnie Hewlett, Washington State University


    McGee's second edition to Watching Lacandon Maya Lives provides an honest and valuable insight into Lacandon lifeways from the past to the present. Through the description of his personal experience among three generations of one extended family in a Lacandon village, the author shows how the natives adapted to cultural and environmental changes, underlining the importance of extensive anthropological field work and personal commitment.


    — Alice Balsanelli, Centro de Estudios Mayas of Mexico City


    In this new edition, McGee invites readers to consider the nature of social change as he reflects on more than 40 years of fieldwork among Lacandon Maya families. Ethnographically driven, theoretically informed, and accessibly written, the text offers a welcome update to an anthropological classic.


    — Ruth Gomberg-Muñoz, Loyola University Chicago


    Watching Lacandon Maya Lives, 2e is the best detailed treatise of Northern Lacandon Maya domestic life and social interaction in rural Chiapas, Mexico to date. McGee’s long-term and thoughtful insights on field research, cultural interpretations, gender issues, social change, and people’s individual perspectives and actions make Watching Lacandon Maya Lives anthropologically significant. I very much recommend this book to anyone wanting to learn more about Lacandon Maya society and the discipline of anthropology.


    — Joel W. Palka, Arizona State University


    The revised edition of Watching Lacandon Maya Lives will be useful to scholars and students as an honest introduction to the realities of anthropological fieldwork: the early awkwardness of entering a new environment and living among people who hold a different vision of the universe and the delight, frustration, and self-doubts that come from watching other people’s lives and trying to understand why they act the way they do. Most importantly, McGee describes how he, as an anthropologist and an individual, has reacted to the lessons of field research and how those lessons have affected his work and life. In highlighting the changes he has witnessed during four decades of watching Lacandón Maya lives, and in acknowledging the changes he has observed in himself, McGee has brought us a book filled with insight, understanding, and authenticity.


    — Indigenous Religious Traditions


Features
Features
  • 9/19/23, Faculti: Mcgee discussed the cultural changes in the Maya rainforest farming community over the last forty years.

    Link: https://faculti.net/watching-lacandon-maya-lives/



    New features
    • Revised Introduction incorporates the author’s recent work with the Lacandon and discussions of anthropological writing, culture theory, and how events in the author’s personal life have changed his approach to anthropological fieldwork.
    • Revised chapter, “Finding an Income in the Lacandon Jungle” focuses on families who have shifted from a subsistence farming economy to earning revenue by renting facilities to tourists, owning small community stores, working as hired labor for archaeologists, or make use of a variety of government rural aid programs created in the last two decades (Chapter 5).
    • New chapter, “Forty Years Among the Lacandon: Some Lessons Learned,” discusses what the author’s 40 years of experience as an ethnographer has taught him about the discipline of anthropology and the concept of culture (Chapter 8)



Resources
Resources
  • FOR PROFESSORS
    Ancillary Materials are available for this title. For access to these professor use only materials, please Sign-In if you are a registered user, or Register then email us at rltextbooks@bloomsbury.com
    Lecture Notes. The Lecture Notes provide the tables and figures from the text.

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