Collecting Native America: John Lloyd Stephens and the Rhetorics of Archaeological Value

<p class="WW-Default"><span style="font-family:Candara;" lang="en-us" xml:lang="en-us"> </span>This article focuses on the representations of Maya statues made by archaeologist–explorer John Lloyd Stephens and his artistic collaborator Freder...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Christen Mucher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eScholarship Publishing, University of California 2018-12-01
Series:Journal of Transnational American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://escholarship.org/uc/item/23h3n9w9
id doaj-3df763ccda9948a3b5634ea33b6f7b5b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3df763ccda9948a3b5634ea33b6f7b5b2020-12-15T08:16:48ZengeScholarship Publishing, University of CaliforniaJournal of Transnational American Studies1940-07642018-12-0191ark:13030/qt23h3n9w9Collecting Native America: John Lloyd Stephens and the Rhetorics of Archaeological ValueChristen Mucher0Smith College<p class="WW-Default"><span style="font-family:Candara;" lang="en-us" xml:lang="en-us"> </span>This article focuses on the representations of Maya statues made by archaeologist–explorer John Lloyd Stephens and his artistic collaborator Frederick Catherwood in the 1840s. While Stephens’s and Catherwood’s trips to Central America, Mexico, and the Yucatán were meant to provide material objects for a Pan-American museum of Native American “antiquities,” the statues themselves were never exhibited to the public. Nonetheless, the visual and literary representations of the Maya “idols” circulating across North and Central America as well as Europe incited international interest and dramatically increased similar statues’ monetary value. Stephens’s valuation of Indigenous objects as possessable historical relics rested on the transformation of Indigenous bodies into laborers and Indigenous homelands into saleable property; their representation as mystical “idols” merely concealed this transformation. What is more, the historical and monetary value of the relics collected by Stephens was eventually surpassed by their textual reproductions. These representations—rather than the artifacts or communities behind them—set a persistent pattern for the study and evaluation of Native American “culture” as demonstrated by the textual afterlives of Stephens’s work.</p> <p> </p>http://escholarship.org/uc/item/23h3n9w9john lloyd stephens, maya antiquities, collecting, relics, idols
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christen Mucher
spellingShingle Christen Mucher
Collecting Native America: John Lloyd Stephens and the Rhetorics of Archaeological Value
Journal of Transnational American Studies
john lloyd stephens, maya antiquities, collecting, relics, idols
author_facet Christen Mucher
author_sort Christen Mucher
title Collecting Native America: John Lloyd Stephens and the Rhetorics of Archaeological Value
title_short Collecting Native America: John Lloyd Stephens and the Rhetorics of Archaeological Value
title_full Collecting Native America: John Lloyd Stephens and the Rhetorics of Archaeological Value
title_fullStr Collecting Native America: John Lloyd Stephens and the Rhetorics of Archaeological Value
title_full_unstemmed Collecting Native America: John Lloyd Stephens and the Rhetorics of Archaeological Value
title_sort collecting native america: john lloyd stephens and the rhetorics of archaeological value
publisher eScholarship Publishing, University of California
series Journal of Transnational American Studies
issn 1940-0764
publishDate 2018-12-01
description <p class="WW-Default"><span style="font-family:Candara;" lang="en-us" xml:lang="en-us"> </span>This article focuses on the representations of Maya statues made by archaeologist–explorer John Lloyd Stephens and his artistic collaborator Frederick Catherwood in the 1840s. While Stephens’s and Catherwood’s trips to Central America, Mexico, and the Yucatán were meant to provide material objects for a Pan-American museum of Native American “antiquities,” the statues themselves were never exhibited to the public. Nonetheless, the visual and literary representations of the Maya “idols” circulating across North and Central America as well as Europe incited international interest and dramatically increased similar statues’ monetary value. Stephens’s valuation of Indigenous objects as possessable historical relics rested on the transformation of Indigenous bodies into laborers and Indigenous homelands into saleable property; their representation as mystical “idols” merely concealed this transformation. What is more, the historical and monetary value of the relics collected by Stephens was eventually surpassed by their textual reproductions. These representations—rather than the artifacts or communities behind them—set a persistent pattern for the study and evaluation of Native American “culture” as demonstrated by the textual afterlives of Stephens’s work.</p> <p> </p>
topic john lloyd stephens, maya antiquities, collecting, relics, idols
url http://escholarship.org/uc/item/23h3n9w9
work_keys_str_mv AT christenmucher collectingnativeamericajohnlloydstephensandtherhetoricsofarchaeologicalvalue
_version_ 1724382536648359936