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January 2012

8.5 x 11 in.
359 pp., 41 b&w photos, 174 line drawings, 8 maps

ISBN: 978-0-292-72852-3
$65.00, hardcover with dust jacket
33% website discount: $43.55

 
 

The University of Texas Press's warehouse will be closed for inventory from Friday, 24 February 2012, until Thursday, 1 March 2012. Orders placed after noon Central time on Wednesday, 22 February 2012, will not ship until the inventory is over.

 
 
     

Reconsidering Olmec Visual Culture
The Unborn, Women, and Creation

By Carolyn E. Tate

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

Recently, scholars of Olmec visual culture have identified symbols for umbilical cords, bundles, and cave-wombs, as well as a significant number of women portrayed on monuments and as figurines. In this groundbreaking study, Carolyn Tate demonstrates that these subjects were part of a major emphasis on gestational imagery in Formative Period Mesoamerica. In Reconsidering Olmec Visual Culture, she identifies the presence of women, human embryos, and fetuses in monuments and portable objects dating from 1400 to 400 BC and originating throughout much of Mesoamerica. This highly original study sheds new light on the prominent roles that women and gestational beings played in Early Formative societies, revealing female shamanic practices, the generative concepts that motivated caching and bundling, and the expression of feminine knowledge in the 260-day cycle and related divinatory and ritual activities.

Reconsidering Olmec Visual Culture is the first study that situates the unique hollow babies of Formative Mesoamerica within the context of prominent females and the prevalent imagery of gestation and birth. It is also the first major art historical study of La Venta and the first to identify Mesoamerica's earliest creation narrative. It provides a more nuanced understanding of how later societies, including Teotihuacan and West Mexico, as well as the Maya, either rejected certain Formative Period visual forms, rituals, social roles, and concepts or adopted and transformed them into the enduring themes of Mesoamerican symbol systems.

Carolyn E. Tate is Professor of Art History at Texas Tech University and former Associate Curator of Pre-Columbian Art at the Dallas Museum of Art. She co-curated the exhibitions The Olmec World: Ritual and Rulership at the Art Museum, Princeton University, and Olmec Art of Ancient Mexico at the National Gallery of Art.

The William and Bettye Nowlin Series in Art, History, and Culture of the Western Hemisphere


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