Everyday Life Matters
Maya Farmers at Chan
Cynthia Robin
Paper: $24.95
"An absolute must-read. Robin’s thorough understanding of commoners and how they occasionally interacted with elites provides a solid foundation for social reconstruction."--Payson Sheets, coeditor of Surviving Sudden Environmental Change
While the study of ancient civilizations most often focuses on temples and royal tombs, a substantial part of the archaeological record remains hidden in the understudied day-to-day lives of artisans, farmers, hunters, and other ordinary people of the ancient world. Various chores completed during the course of a person’s daily life, though at first glance trivial, have a powerful impact on society as a whole. Everyday Life Matters develops general methods and theories for studying the applications of everyday life in archaeology, anthropology, and a wide range of related disciplines.
Examining the two-thousand-year history (800 B.C.-A.D. 1200) of the ancient farming community of Chan in Belize, Cynthia Robin’s ground-breaking work explains why the average person should matter to archaeologists studying larger societal patterns. Robin argues that the impact of the mundane can be substantial, so much so that the study of a polity without regard to its citizenry is incomplete. Refocusing attention away from the Maya elite and offering critical analysis of daily life elucidated by anthropological theory, Robin engages us to consider the larger implications of the commonplace and to rethink the constitution of human societies by ordinary people living routine lives.
Cynthia Robin, associate professor of anthropology at Northwestern University, is the editor of Chan: An Ancient Maya Farming Community.
- Sample Chapter(s):
- Table of Contents
- Excerpt
An important contribution to the archaeological study of daily life.
--Choice
Her theories and methods are eclectic.
--Antiquity
Cynthia Robin has brought together diverse theory, methods, and empirical data into a strong case for reconsidering how we view ancient commoners and their role in shaping their societies.
--Journal of Anthropological Research
In breadth, methodology, and findings, this volume scales new heights in the study of Maya society and culture.
--Anthropology – Northwestern University
In her work, we learn that an approach to everyday life is central to human existence, representative of complex interactions, based on ordinary objects, reflective social change, featured in people’s social roles, and implicates the multidimensional lives of people.
--Anthropos