Fashioning Tradition: Maya Huipiles in the Field Museum Collections. Fieldiana: Anthropology, New Series No. 38. J. Claire Odland. Chicago: Field Museum of Natural History, 2006. 67 pp.
Reviewed by Carol Hendrickson
The Field Museum of Natural History (FMNH) holds a sizeable collection of Guatemalan traje (‘Maya clothing’), including 500 pieces of women’s attire. J. Claire Odland focuses her study on 145 huipiles
(‘Maya blouses’) collected between 1893 and 1995 from seven
municipalities: Quetzaltenango, Chichicastenango, San Juan Comalapa,
San Antonio Aguas Calientes, Santa María de Jesús, San Pedro
Sacatepequéz, and Cobán. Drawing insights from the holdings of the
Field Museum and other textile collections, published works, and field
research in Comalapa and San Antonio Aguas Calientes between 1994-2005,
the author has produced a museum monograph with twenty-two pages of
text, seventy illustrations, and six pages of descriptions of the
illustrations. Her aim is to analyze the huipiles in terms of the
materials and technologies with which they were produced; the social,
political, and economic dimensions of their use; and fashion changes
that mark significant historical shifts. Given the ambitious nature of
this project—topically, geographically, and temporally—it is no
surprise that Odland touches only briefly on a vast range of topics.
The
body of the text is divided into six sections. Odland presents a sketch
of each of the seven municipalities and distinguishing characteristics
of the huipiles from each of the different areas. Fashion trends in
traditional wear and the social uses of traje are recurring themes, and
these link to the second section where, in less than three pages,
Odland describes various social characteristics and uses that can be
signaled by Maya blouses (e.g., age, wealth, sexuality, and
worldliness). She then considers the materials and technologies that
figure in huipil production, including the subjects of design motifs
and their meanings, and markets for traje sales. The final sections of
the monograph outline some of the traditional activities of Maya women
as well as changes in Guatemalan life that have been reflected in
huipil design. Throughout the text, references to particular pieces are
keyed to the photographs bound at the back of the volume.
Odland’s
work is most informative when she presents insights about particular
pieces in the Field Museum collection (e.g., that “the oldest huipil…
was a gift of the Government of Guatemala to the 1893 Chicago Colombian
[sic] Exposition” [p. 8]). It is also a pleasure to see the images, and
this work will surely serve to alert readers to the wealth of the Field
Museum holdings. However, the length of the monograph is simply too
short to do justice to the breadth of topics, and the author is often
left making such gross generalizations that these fail to get at the
complexity of situations and can even lead the reader astray. The
author was also challenged to organize her narrative around sets of
huipiles from so many regions and different time periods. The result is
a good photographic record of a segment of the FMNH’s huipil holdings
but a very general account of their historical and cultural
significance.
Carol
Hendrickson is Professor of Anthropology at Marlboro College. She has
has been researching weaving in the central highlands of Guatemala for
more than twenty-five years. Her research focuses on the ways clothing
non-verbally relates cultural meanings and provides insight into local
understandings of issues such as ethnicity, gender, class, politics,
and national identity. She is the author of Weaving Identities: Construction of Dress and Self in a Highland Guatemala Town (University of Texas Press, 1995). With Edward Fischer she co-wrote Tecpán Guatemala: A Modern Maya Town in Global and Local Context (Westview, 2002).