Sam Holley-Kline is an assistant clinical professor in the Honors College at the University of Maryland, College Park, and was named a 2023-24 American Council of Learned Societies Fellow.
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Description
List of Illustrations List of Tables Preface Acknowledgments Introduction 1. Lands: Public Pyramids, Private Parcels 2. Oil: Practical Entanglements, Cumulative Contamination 3. Vanilla: Violence and Temporality 4. Wage Labor: From Subsistence Farming to Archaeology 5. Custodios: Cohorts and Histories of Labor 6. Experts: Precarity and Opportunity Conclusion Appendix: Annual Visitors to El TajIn, 1925-2024 Notes Bibliography Index
"Immensely important. . . . Sam Holley-Kline reframes the archaeological site of El TajIn as a location of recent, rather than just ancient, Indigenous history. In the Shadow of El TajIn makes a significant contribution to the emerging field of the history of archaeology in Mexico and beyond, as well as to our understanding of Mexican political economy in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries."-Lisa Pinley Covert, author of San Miguel de Allende: Mexicans, Foreigners, and the Making of a World Heritage Site

