Writing amidst the Scribbles: The Role and Place of Writing in Ancient Maya Graffiti
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Writing amidst the Scribbles : The Role and Place of Writing in Ancient Maya Graffiti. / Helmke, Christophe; Źrałka, Jarosław.
In: University College London. Institute of Archaeology. Papers, Vol. 31, No. 1, 2021, p. 93-120.Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Writing amidst the Scribbles
T2 - The Role and Place of Writing in Ancient Maya Graffiti
AU - Helmke, Christophe
AU - Źrałka, Jarosław
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - The significant corpus of ancient Maya graffiti (c. 200 BC-AD 950) attests to the widespread practice of secondarily altering architectural surfaces during the course of their use. For the most part this corpus is highly figurative and includes a series of schematic elements that attest to their production by the hands of a variety of agents. As one of the largest corpora of graffiti from any early civilization, the figural representations include a wide array of themes. Some graffiti feature complex, narrative scenes that document important moments of ritual life of the ancient Maya. Almost paradoxically, amid the intricate and highly figurative scenes are hieroglyphic graffiti. What do these written graffiti record, and what is the degree of literacy that these attest to? This raises a series of interesting questions including whether written and figural graffiti were etched onto walls by the same individuals, or whether these represent different social segments each leaving their mark. From these observations follow a series of important ramifications as to authorship, the use of the built environment as well as the motivations behind the graffiti itself
AB - The significant corpus of ancient Maya graffiti (c. 200 BC-AD 950) attests to the widespread practice of secondarily altering architectural surfaces during the course of their use. For the most part this corpus is highly figurative and includes a series of schematic elements that attest to their production by the hands of a variety of agents. As one of the largest corpora of graffiti from any early civilization, the figural representations include a wide array of themes. Some graffiti feature complex, narrative scenes that document important moments of ritual life of the ancient Maya. Almost paradoxically, amid the intricate and highly figurative scenes are hieroglyphic graffiti. What do these written graffiti record, and what is the degree of literacy that these attest to? This raises a series of interesting questions including whether written and figural graffiti were etched onto walls by the same individuals, or whether these represent different social segments each leaving their mark. From these observations follow a series of important ramifications as to authorship, the use of the built environment as well as the motivations behind the graffiti itself
U2 - 10.14324/111.444.2041-9015.1287
DO - 10.14324/111.444.2041-9015.1287
M3 - Journal article
VL - 31
SP - 93
EP - 120
JO - Papers of the Institute of Archaeology
JF - Papers of the Institute of Archaeology
SN - 0965-9315
IS - 1
ER -
ID: 284903813