After Cortés: Archaeological Legacies of the European Invasion in Mesoamerica
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 84th Annual Meeting, Albuquerque, NM (2019)
This collection contains the abstracts of the papers presented in the session entitled "After Cortés: Archaeological Legacies of the European Invasion in Mesoamerica," at the 84th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.
On April 21, 1519, Hernán Cortés landed on the coast of Veracruz and, as the saying goes, the rest is history. In this session, we challenge the notion that the Spanish invasion predestined the next 500 years of sociocultural change in Mesoamerica. Participants present innovative studies based on the archaeology of everyday life that show how Native communities and immigrant groups mediated macroregional economic shifts, power relations, resistance, religious conversion, technological innovation, consumption, and mestizaje through material practice. Participants use diverse sources of material, written, and ethnographic evidence to interrogate cause and effect. The short-term, singular voice contexts of written and oral histories are read against the long-term cumulative voice of the material record to reveal continuity and change from the sixteenth century to the present. The papers highlight the transformation of landscapes, households, religious institutions, markets, commodity production, craft workshops, agriculture and animal husbandry from locales across Mexico and Central America. The tangible and material legacies of the conquest in contemporary society, and the tales archaeologists tell that validate or discredit social memories of the invasion, are long overdue for explicit analysis.
Other Keywords
Historic •
Historical Archaeology •
contact period •
Colonialism •
Ethnohistory/History •
Ceramic Analysis •
figurines •
Maya •
Architecture •
Survey
Geographic Keywords
United Mexican States (Country) •
North America (Continent) •
Belize (Country) •
Tabasco (State / Territory) •
Yucatan (State / Territory) •
Corozal (State / Territory) •
Quintana Roo (State / Territory) •
Campeche (State / Territory) •
Peten (State / Territory) •
Orange Walk (State / Territory)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-12 of 12)
- Documents (12)
- 350 Years after the Conquest: British Influences on a Multiethnic Refugee Maya Community (2019)
- Beyond First Encounters: Mechanisms of Social Transformation at the Colonial Port of Veracruz (2019)
- Crosses, Burned Churches, and Kidnapped Priests: Ambivalent Maya Catholics in 19th-century British Honduras (2019)
- From Narrative Picture Writing Bands to Pseudo Cartographies. How Native Scribes Invented Powerful New Media after the Conquest (2019)
- From the Canopy to the Caye: Two of Britain's Colonial Ventures in Nineteenth-Century Belize (2019)
- Landscape with Bees: Apiculture in Yucatán after the Spanish Invasion (2019)
- Lies the Spaniards Told (2019)
- Material Culture and Technological Innovation in Colonial Soconusco, Chiapas, Mexico (2019)
- Mirrors of Time: Figurines in the New World Order (2019)
- The Peal of Domination at San Bernabé, Petén, Guatemala (2019)
- Shifting Colonial Narratives at the Edge of the Spanish Colony: 15th-17th Century Maya Archaeology at Progresso Lagoon, Belize (2019)
- "They came to loot our treasures": Indigenous, Pirates, and Indigenous-Pirates on the Mexican Pacific Coast (2019)