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Exposing the Maya focuses on the works of 19th-century
photographers Désiré Charnay, Alice and Augustus Le Plongeon,
Teobert Maler, Alfred Maudslay and Adela Breton, all of whom were
masters of their craft and travelled extensively to sites in Mexico
and Central America. The over 100 selected images in this volume,
together with nearly 40 additional contextual images featuring
sketches from travel journals, hand-coloured drawings, prints, and
maps, are combined with the photographers’ own words found in
their published writings, journals and letters to provide insight
into their methods, context for their images, and capture the
realities of field work in Mesoamerica. Accessible and highly
illustrated, Exposing the Maya features rare and important early
photographs of the archaeological ruins and remains of the great
Mayan and Aztec civilizations of Mesoamerica, from an age that
witnessed the evolution of photographic techniques and brought to
life the long-faded murals and decoration of these ruins. This is
an absorbing story of incredible journeys, the challenging
conditions under which these pioneering photographers produced
their images, and how they perceived the remnants of these ancient
indigenous cultures in modern-day Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras.
In two decades of traveling throughout Mexico, Central America, and
Europe, French priest Charles Etienne Brasseur de Bourbourg
(1814-1874) amassed hundreds of indigenous manuscripts and printed
books, including grammars and vocabularies that brought to light
languages and cultures little known at the time. Although his
efforts yielded many of the foundational texts of Mesoamerican
studies - the pre-Columbian Codex Troana, the only known copies of
the Popol Vuh and the indigenous dance drama Rabinal-Achi, and
Diego De Landa's Relacian de la cosas de Yucatan - Brasseur earned
disdain among scholars for his theories linking Maya writings to
the mythical continent of Atlantis. In The Manuscript Hunter,
translator Katia Sainson reasserts his standing as the founder of
modern Maya studies, presenting three of his travel writings in
English for the first time. While civil wars raged throughout
Mexico and Central America and foreign interests sought access to
the region's rich resources, Brasseur focused on uncovering
Mesoamerica's mysterious past by examining its ancient manuscripts
and living oral traditions. His ""Notes from a Voyage in Central
America,"" ""From Guatemala City to Rabinal,"" and Voyage across
the Isthmus of Tehuantepec document his travels in search of these
texts and traditions. Brasseur's writings weave vivid geographical
descriptions of Central America and Mexico during the mid-1800s
with keen social and political analysis, all steeped in vast
knowledge of the region's history and interest in its indigenous
cultures. Coupled with Sainson's thoughtful introduction and
annotations, these captivating, accessible accounts reveal Brasseur
de Bourbourg's true accomplishments and offer an unrivaled view of
the birth of Mesoamerican studies in the nineteenth century.
Brasseur's writings not only depict Central America and Mexico
through the eyes of a European traveler at a key moment, but also
illuminate the remarkable efforts of one man to understand and
preserve Mesoamerica's cultural traditions for all time.
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