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Using commodified representations to ‘perform’ and ‘fashion’ cultural heritage among Yucatec Maya women (Mexico)

Using commodified representations to ‘perform’ and ‘fashion’ cultural heritage among Yucatec Maya... The east coast of the Yucatán Peninsula has been a popular tourist destination for many years. To capture the gaze of tourists, promotional tourism literature of Cancún, the Riviera Maya, and the Grand Costa Maya feature common imagery used to promote other tropical environs. To set this destination apart, representations of Mayan Culture, such as archaeological ruins and ‘timeless’ Mayan villages, are used. As the tourism industry seeped its way inland to Valladolid, Maya women from Xocén now have more direct interaction with tourists. With the commodification of various aspects of contemporary Maya culture, Maya women use these representations to sell their heritage to tourists for financial gain. As these commodified aspects are essential components to Maya women’s lives, such as the 'iipil (traditional dress) and the daily work they do in their homes, Maya women can ‘perform’ and ‘fashion’ their heritage to reflect the modern tastes of tourists and themselves. Maya women play an active role in changing these outdated representations of their culture by asserting their modernity and in this process, reap some financial benefit, as well as promote and preserve their heritage. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change Taylor & Francis

Using commodified representations to ‘perform’ and ‘fashion’ cultural heritage among Yucatec Maya women (Mexico)

Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change , Volume 20 (1-2): 16 – Mar 4, 2022

Using commodified representations to ‘perform’ and ‘fashion’ cultural heritage among Yucatec Maya women (Mexico)

Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change , Volume 20 (1-2): 16 – Mar 4, 2022

Abstract

The east coast of the Yucatán Peninsula has been a popular tourist destination for many years. To capture the gaze of tourists, promotional tourism literature of Cancún, the Riviera Maya, and the Grand Costa Maya feature common imagery used to promote other tropical environs. To set this destination apart, representations of Mayan Culture, such as archaeological ruins and ‘timeless’ Mayan villages, are used. As the tourism industry seeped its way inland to Valladolid, Maya women from Xocén now have more direct interaction with tourists. With the commodification of various aspects of contemporary Maya culture, Maya women use these representations to sell their heritage to tourists for financial gain. As these commodified aspects are essential components to Maya women’s lives, such as the 'iipil (traditional dress) and the daily work they do in their homes, Maya women can ‘perform’ and ‘fashion’ their heritage to reflect the modern tastes of tourists and themselves. Maya women play an active role in changing these outdated representations of their culture by asserting their modernity and in this process, reap some financial benefit, as well as promote and preserve their heritage.

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Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Copyright
© 2021 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group
ISSN
1747-7654
eISSN
1476-6825
DOI
10.1080/14766825.2021.1966023
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The east coast of the Yucatán Peninsula has been a popular tourist destination for many years. To capture the gaze of tourists, promotional tourism literature of Cancún, the Riviera Maya, and the Grand Costa Maya feature common imagery used to promote other tropical environs. To set this destination apart, representations of Mayan Culture, such as archaeological ruins and ‘timeless’ Mayan villages, are used. As the tourism industry seeped its way inland to Valladolid, Maya women from Xocén now have more direct interaction with tourists. With the commodification of various aspects of contemporary Maya culture, Maya women use these representations to sell their heritage to tourists for financial gain. As these commodified aspects are essential components to Maya women’s lives, such as the 'iipil (traditional dress) and the daily work they do in their homes, Maya women can ‘perform’ and ‘fashion’ their heritage to reflect the modern tastes of tourists and themselves. Maya women play an active role in changing these outdated representations of their culture by asserting their modernity and in this process, reap some financial benefit, as well as promote and preserve their heritage.

Journal

Journal of Tourism and Cultural ChangeTaylor & Francis

Published: Mar 4, 2022

Keywords: Gender; Mayan culture; Mexico; commodification; tourism; heritage

References