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Journal ArticleDOI

Mesoamerican Community Studies: The Past Decade

01 Oct 1979-Annual Review of Anthropology (Annual Reviews 4139 El Camino Way, P.O. Box 10139, Palo Alto, CA 94303-0139, USA)-Vol. 8, Iss: 1, pp 45-69
TL;DR: For more than 50 years, Mesoamerica! has provided the field for an impres- sive amount of anthropological research as discussed by the authors, and the overwhelming bulk of the work has been reported in the form of community studies; however, the actual amount of work that has been done over the past 10 years is underrepresented.
Abstract: For more than 50 years, Mesoamerica! has provided the field for an impres­ sive amount of anthropological research. The overwhelming bulk of the work has been reported in the form of community studies. To date, there are more than 100 published book-length studies of Mexican and Guatema­ lan communities; more than half of these have appeared during the past decade. Our concern in this essay is to review the work published in book form within the decade 1967-1977. The sheer quantity of available material evidences the discipline's continued interest in the peoples of Mesoamerica. In spite of the number of studies cited in this essay, the actual amount of work that has been done over the past 10 years is underrepresented. Only a few studies by European scholars are discussed here; we have ignored almost totally the wealth of journal articles; we have made no attempt to trace the numerous relevant dissertations;2 and we have only touched on the
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TL;DR: In the Mesoamerican barrio as mentioned in this paper, a set of co-equal subdivisions and a formal community subdivision in a hierarchically ordered, vertically integrated, customary system of social organization are defined.
Abstract: One of the most perplexing topics in Mesoamerican ethnology is the customary(2) social unit that mediates relations between household (or domestic group) and community in Mesoamerican Indian and rural society (Nutini 1976:14; Thomas 1979:45; for the label rural, see Chambers and Young 1979). (Mesoamerica here refers to the most intensively studied portions of this region, central and southern Mexico and Guatemala, but the region also includes Belize, El Salvador, and small sections of Honduras, Nicaragua, and Costa Rica [Kirchhoff 1968:23; Weaver 1993:2].) Scholars routinely mention this social unit among the distinctive features of the region's social organization (e.g., Kirchhoff 1968:30; Redfield and Tax 1968:33; Wolf 1959:220). It is a prominent element in local identity, politics, and ceremonial life in many Indian and rural communities (Guiteras Holmes 1968:104; Thomas 1988:195). There is no consensus on its defining characteristics, however, or its prevalence (now and in the past), or its chief variants, or, very importantly, what it should be called for comparative purposes. These issues form the substance of this article, but I will propose a definition and an analytical label at this point to facilitate discussion. The social arrangement in question is simultaneously an institutionalized alliance of households (or domestic groups) and a formal community subdivision in a hierarchically ordered, vertically integrated, customary system of social organization. It is a social segment in the strict sense employed by Service (1962:18-19) and Firth (1964:60-62), one of a set of like units that relate to one another in an orderly fashion, and whose functions serve to integrate one level of social organization with another. The unit is identified often in the literature as the Mesoamerican barrio. For reasons explained further on, barrio is an unfortunate choice of label. The alternative I propose is customary subdivision. Not every unit of organization found at the level between household and community is a customary subdivision. Excluded are units whose only purpose is to serve civil-administrative needs, such as the noncustomary subdivisions known as municipal tenencias and town secciones or demarcaciones. These are externally imposed inventions for the purposes of tax collection, censuses, and so forth. They bear little or no relevance to community organization unless their boundaries happen to correspond with the community's customary subdivisions (Guiteras Holmes 1968:105; Hunt and Nash 1967:253ff.; Redfield 1928:287; Slade 1992:50). Likewise disqualified are customary social units devoted solely to the needs of their membership, such as informal surname groups and kindreds (Taggart 1976), ritual kinship bonds or compadrazgo (Nutini 1984; Nutini and Bell 1980), reciprocal exchange networks such as ayuda, vuelta mano, and guelaguetza (Nutini 1968; Stephen 1991), patron-client dyads (Foster 1961, 1963), political factions (Friedrich 1977; Hunt 1976), and voluntary religious fellowships (Dow 1974; Nash 1958:62-64). Customary subdivision systems, by contrast, exhibit these features: an established set of co-equal subdivisions; community rules for changing the number of recognized subdivisions; community rules for assigning subdivision affiliation, such that all or virtually all the households in the community are incorporated into the system; and the formal or informal authority to draft labor from the members for both the benefit of the constituent households and the benefit of the community (Kirchhoff in Guiteras Holmes 1968:117; Lockhart 1992:16; Mulhare 1986:396, 406-08). Many qualitatively different kinds of social arrangements serve as the basis for customary subdivision systems in Mesoamerica; e.g., descent groups, territorial wards, and less easily defined groups that merge kinship, territoriality, and other criteria in varying degrees. Several obstacles stand in the way of the systematic, comparative study of these systems: 1. …

21 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors presented a hypothesis about the development of a cultural factor: indigenous people prefer to work on a small scale and this cultural factor developed during the colonial period and remains a part of current indigenous culture.
Abstract: Indigenous peoples have three features in common: their historical heritage, their current culture and their extreme poverty. This paper presents a hypothesis about the development of a cultural factor: indigenous people prefer to work on a small scale. This cultural factor developed during the colonial period and remains a part of current indigenous culture. To test the hypothesis, I elaborated a trade model and an economic growth model that take into account the cultural factor. As predicted, the results help to explain indigenous peoples’ poverty. This article includes empirical evidence about Mexico’s indigenous population.

13 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that human behavior is always motivated by certain purposes, and these purposes grow out of sets of assumptions which are not usually recognized by those who hold them.
Abstract: "Human behavior is always motivated by certain purposes, and these purposes grow out of sets of assumptions which are not usually recognized by those who hold them. The basic premises of a particular culture are unconsciously accepted by the individual through his constant and exclusive participation in that culture. It is these assumptions-the essence of all the culturally conditioned purposes, motives, and principles-which determine the behavior of a people, underlie all the institutions of a community, and give them unity" (HsiaoTung Fei and Chi-I Chang 1945:81-82). "Human beings in whatever culture are provided with cognitive orientation in a cosmos: there is 'order' and 'reason' rather than chaos. There are basic premises and principles implied, even if these do not happen to be consciously formulated and articulated by the people themselves. We are confronted with the philosophical implications of their thought, the nature of the world of being as they conceive it. If we pursue the problem deeply enough we soon come face to face with a relatively unexplored territory-ethno-metaphysics. Can we penetrate this realm in other cultures? What kind of evidence is at our disposal? ... The problem is a complex and difficult one, but this should not preclude its exploration" (Hallowell 1960:21).

803 citations

Book
01 Jun 1951

258 citations

Book
01 Jan 1975

160 citations