THE FOX AND THE ARMADILLO: AN INQUIRY INTO CLASSIC MAYA “ANIMAL” CATEGORIES

Pub Date : 2022-05-04 DOI:10.1017/S0956536121000638
Sarah E. Newman, Franco D. Rossi
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Abstract

Abstract This article investigates Classic Maya understandings of two particular animal species: the (gray) fox and the armadillo. We use these species as a point of entry into Classic Maya categorizations of the non-human animal world, examining the salient biological and physical characteristics of those animals that Classic-period artists and scribes chose to highlight. Rather than accepting the creatures depicted on painted pottery or referenced in hieroglyphic texts as generalized examples of particular kinds (i.e., simply “a fox” or “an armadillo”), however, we show how the evidence from ancient art, historical accounts, and contemporary ethnography points to an emphasis on specific beings, often named individuals, who engage in particular behaviors and relate to other entities (both human and non-human) in distinctive ways. Although this article focuses exclusively on the fox and the armadillo, those species serve as examples through which we consider the limitations of applying Western taxonomic categories to other systems of knowledge, as well as the possibilities for how we might catch glimpses of radically different ways of organizing the world.
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狐狸与ARMADILLO:对玛雅经典动物范畴的探究
摘要本文探讨了玛雅人对两种特殊动物的理解:(灰色)狐狸和armadillo。我们以这些物种为切入点,进入玛雅对非人类动物世界的经典分类,研究那些经典时期艺术家和抄写员选择强调的动物的显著生物学和物理特征。然而,我们并没有接受彩陶上描绘的或象形文字中提到的生物作为特定种类的广义例子(即简单的“狐狸”或“armadillo”),而是展示了来自古代艺术、历史记录和当代民族志的证据如何指向对特定生物的强调,他们从事特定的行为,并以独特的方式与其他实体(包括人类和非人类)建立联系。尽管这篇文章只关注狐狸和armadillo,但这些物种是我们思考将西方分类学类别应用于其他知识系统的局限性的例子,以及我们如何瞥见组织世界的截然不同的方式的可能性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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