Description

Book Synopsis
An innovative study argues that in Mesoamerica, holes were conceived and produced as conduits of vital forces and material abundance, prerequisites for the emergence of life.

Trade Review
[Finegold] demonstrates—convincingly, and in engaging prose—that the sustained analysis of holes provides insight into the ways in which ancient Mesoamericans conceived of cavities as teeming with vital energies or pregnant with the possibility of emergence...there is a satisfying rhythm and structure to this book, which moves through an impressive array of ideas but keeps returning, almost poetically, to the place it started: a beautifully painted Late Classic Maya plate rife with meaning and replete with a small drilled hole. Finegold charts a new and productive path for thinking about voids as procreative spaces that were integral to Mesoamerican creation narratives, ritual behavior, individual identities, and expressions of social order. For this reason, this book should be of interest to readers beyond the confines of Mesoamerica who, like Finegold, see potential in a void. * caa.reviews *
[A] wonderfully illustrated book...Finegold has offered us a well-written, well-illustrated book on a topic that has received relatively little attention...Finegold manages to pierce a productive hole in our previous frame of understanding, allowing for a new and creative reinterpretation of a Mesoamerican cultural tradition and the underlying worldview. * 21: Inquires into Art, History, and the Visual *
One of the great contributions of this volume...is to provide a model for using deep object reading—integrating material, iconographic, and sociohistorical interpretations of a single ceramic dish—as a springboard into uniquely Mesoamerican philosophical systems of aesthetics, ontology, and metaphysics. Finegold’s arguments also open the door to a further consideration of voids in Mesoamerican material culture (and they are everywhere once one begins to look for them), acknowledging that his text does not and could not cover the full scope of the subject. The implications of his central thesis are far-reaching and will no doubt spark further debate and exploration by other scholars. * Latin American & Latinx Visual Culture *

Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. What’s in a Hole? Material Culture and Interpretation
Chapter 2. Perforated Vessels: Revitalizing the Discourse Surrounding “Kill Holes”
Chapter 3. Cavities in the Living Earth
Chapter 4. The Act of Drilling
Chapter 5. Perforating the Body
Chapter 6. Conclusions: Beyond the Resurrection Plate
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Vital Voids

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    £45.00

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    RRP £50.00 – you save £5.00 (10%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 10 Jul 2026.

    A Hardback by Andrew Finegold

    4 in stock

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      View other formats and editions of Vital Voids by Andrew Finegold

      Publisher: University of Texas Press
      Publication Date: 11/05/2021
      ISBN13: 9781477322437, 978-1477322437
      ISBN10: 1477322434
      Also in:
      History of art

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      An innovative study argues that in Mesoamerica, holes were conceived and produced as conduits of vital forces and material abundance, prerequisites for the emergence of life.

      Trade Review
      [Finegold] demonstrates—convincingly, and in engaging prose—that the sustained analysis of holes provides insight into the ways in which ancient Mesoamericans conceived of cavities as teeming with vital energies or pregnant with the possibility of emergence...there is a satisfying rhythm and structure to this book, which moves through an impressive array of ideas but keeps returning, almost poetically, to the place it started: a beautifully painted Late Classic Maya plate rife with meaning and replete with a small drilled hole. Finegold charts a new and productive path for thinking about voids as procreative spaces that were integral to Mesoamerican creation narratives, ritual behavior, individual identities, and expressions of social order. For this reason, this book should be of interest to readers beyond the confines of Mesoamerica who, like Finegold, see potential in a void. * caa.reviews *
      [A] wonderfully illustrated book...Finegold has offered us a well-written, well-illustrated book on a topic that has received relatively little attention...Finegold manages to pierce a productive hole in our previous frame of understanding, allowing for a new and creative reinterpretation of a Mesoamerican cultural tradition and the underlying worldview. * 21: Inquires into Art, History, and the Visual *
      One of the great contributions of this volume...is to provide a model for using deep object reading—integrating material, iconographic, and sociohistorical interpretations of a single ceramic dish—as a springboard into uniquely Mesoamerican philosophical systems of aesthetics, ontology, and metaphysics. Finegold’s arguments also open the door to a further consideration of voids in Mesoamerican material culture (and they are everywhere once one begins to look for them), acknowledging that his text does not and could not cover the full scope of the subject. The implications of his central thesis are far-reaching and will no doubt spark further debate and exploration by other scholars. * Latin American & Latinx Visual Culture *

      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations
      Acknowledgments
      Chapter 1. What’s in a Hole? Material Culture and Interpretation
      Chapter 2. Perforated Vessels: Revitalizing the Discourse Surrounding “Kill Holes”
      Chapter 3. Cavities in the Living Earth
      Chapter 4. The Act of Drilling
      Chapter 5. Perforating the Body
      Chapter 6. Conclusions: Beyond the Resurrection Plate
      Notes
      Bibliography
      Index

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