Journal de la Société des Américanistes (Dec 2011)

The Gift of the « Face of the Living »: Shell faces as social valuables in the Caribbean Late Ceramic Age

  • Angus A. A. Mol

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4000/jsa.11834
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 97, no. 2
pp. 7 – 43

Abstract

Read online

The Gift of the « Face of the Living »: Shell faces as social valuables in the Caribbean Late Ceramic Age. The peoples of the Caribbean Late Ceramic Age (AD 600/800-1492) were in contact through intensive and extensive exchange networks. This article takes a close look at the social mechanism behind one of these networks, which consists of face-depicting shell discs or cones. This is done from a gift-theoretical framework that focuses on aspects of alienability/inalienability of these shell faces in a specifically Caribbean setting. These artefacts are characterized from the indigenous concept of guaízas – « faces of the living » – as understood from ethnohistoric sources. After treating their iconography and giving an overview of their archaeological and socio-cultural contexts the discussion will focus on alienable and inalienable qualities of these artefacts. Finally, « shell faces as guaízas » will be used in an argument in which they figure as social valuables that are used to control extra-communal Others.

Keywords