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Safeguarding the Maroma mixteca as intangible cultural heritage

Carrillo, Julian Antonio
Bloomington, Ind., 2021

In the Mixteca, Mexico, the maroma is a circus-like performance and ritual in which ordinary people transform into extraordinary artists, with the goals of transforming their public by way of wonder and shared laughter while honoring saints and deities. In the early aughts, a group of maroma performers started organizing to safeguard their tradition as it was dying out due to emigration, poverty, and uneven development. To this grass roots revitalization process, the federal institution Culturas Populares added their own resources and strategies, inspired by UNESCO's 2003 “Convention on the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage.” This dissertation is an ethnographic exploration of the ways that maroma performers maintain the tradition as well as how the maroma began to be safeguarded as “intangible cultural heritage” (ICH) institutionally. In its presentation, this dissertation makes use of interviews, life histories, institutional sources, and field observations based on 16 months of research. It contributes to the performance literature; to the maroma literature by telling the history of a 5th generation maroma family; to the history of labor in the Mixteca in the 20th century; and to the question: What is set in motion when a cultural practice is declared ICH? It argues that if future initiatives want to safeguard the maroma more sustainably and equitably, then understanding its history, context, and the ways it is imbued with local meaning must be, at the very least, considered if not better understood. Moreover, it seeks to be a resource for those who want to know about past safeguarding efforts (what worked and what did not) as well as what impact these had, if any, on development, livelihoods, the artform, etc. Lastly, it proposes “neoliberal patrimonialization” (Carrillo 2019), as a synergistic process by which select local cultural practices can be turned into ICH, acquiring, as such, greater value and visibility for people at wider levels. It suggests that, despite its limits and need for further exploration, the concept helps to contextualize the different social actors and institutions surrounding practices deemed ICH and the ways heritage is approached in UNESCO-inspired safeguarding initiatives.
In the Mixteca, Mexico, the maroma is a circus-like performance and ritual in which ordinary people transform into extraordinary artists, with the goals of transforming their public by way of wonder and shared laughter while honoring saints and deities. In the early aughts, a group of maroma performers started organizing to safeguard their tradition as it was dying out due to emigration, poverty, and uneven development. To this grass roots ...

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La Maroma : the revival of rural circus in the Mixteca, Mexico

Carrillo, Julian Antonio
Indiana University - Department of Folklore and Ethnomusicology, 2014

The maroma in southern Mexico is an artistic performance that features acrobats as well as elements of theater, poetry, and music commonly performed by clown poets. The maroma's form and content is drawn from a mixture of medieval European street performances, pre-Hispanic indigenous acrobatic arts, and modern circus features. It is typically performed as entertainment in the context of the patronal saint fiesta, annual popular Catholic events that serve as significant spaces that furnish cultural elements for identity construction. The maroma was very popular in the capital of New Spain throughout the colonial period (1519-1822) but with the rise of the European modern circus was either incorporated or displaced. In the countryside, however, the maroma appears to have continued for a longer period of time. Currently, it is practiced among several ethnic groups, among them the Mixtecs in the Mixteca--a region that covers parts of the states Oaxaca, Guerrero, and Puebla. In the last decade in the Mixteca, maroma groups and state cultural institutions have worked collectively to "revive" the maroma as the practice has been declining since the mid-to-late 20th century. This thesis is a preliminary incursion into the maroma as currently practiced in the Mixteca Baja. I argue that due to the effects of transnationalism and because the maroma has been present at patronal saint fiestas for a long time, significant spaces that furnish cultural elements for identity construction and negotiation, the maroma has become a symbol of a "pan-Mixtec" identity, an identity that unites all Mixtecs regardless of their specific town or region. Drawing from second-hand sources and fieldwork conducted in the towns of Huajuapan de León, La Trinidad Huaxtepec, San Juan Yolotepec, Santa María Acaquizapan, and Santa Rosa Caxtlahuaca, this thesis introduces the practices of maromeros and the work of state cultural institutions to represent a slice of the maroma revival in the region. Moreover, it strives to contribute to the maromero revival by providing information on the maroma in historical context, current performance and performers, and the revivalist activities the regional state cultural institution has taken thus far. [author summary]
The maroma in southern Mexico is an artistic performance that features acrobats as well as elements of theater, poetry, and music commonly performed by clown poets. The maroma's form and content is drawn from a mixture of medieval European street performances, pre-Hispanic indigenous acrobatic arts, and modern circus features. It is typically performed as entertainment in the context of the patronal saint fiesta, annual popular Catholic events ...


Cote : 791.309 72 C317m 2014

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