Publication | Closed Access
7 The Inalienability of Jades in Mesoamerica
20
Citations
39
References
2013
Year
Latin American ArchaeologyMaterial CultureHistorical ArchaeologyReligious SymbolCultural StudiesCultural HeritageElite PrestigeEthnohistoryEducationArchaeologyInalienable PossessionsAnthropologyCultural HistoryLanguage StudiesLabor InvestmentSocial AnthropologyCultural Anthropology
ABSTRACT The rarity of jade as well as its hardness, durability, and sacred color gave it a value incomparable to other materials in Mesoamerica. The labor investment of the crafter, the esoteric knowledge used to create the objects, and the identity of the possessor(s) all contributed to the legacy of jades as inalienable possessions. Jades were gifted, displayed, interred, and even destroyed in honor of the history, memory, prestige, and identity of the object and of the possessor, which were mutually constituted. Jades that were once thought to simply legitimate the elite prestige may have had nested social meanings, and the concept of inalienable possessions can help us to understand that complexity.
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