NBN Book of the Day

Samuel Holley-Kline, "In the Shadow of El Tajín: The Political Economy of Archaeology in Modern Mexico" (U Nebraska Press, 2025)

Feb 3, 2026
Sam Holley-Kline, anthropologist and author who studies the political economy of archaeology in Mexico. He recounts discovering El Tajín and explores land tenure, oil and vanilla economies, and the labor of custodios and administrativos. He highlights how extraction, infrastructure, and everyday work shaped the site and local histories.
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ANECDOTE

Field Moment That Started The Project

  • Samuel Holley-Kline first noticed a man making an offering at El Tajín while on a 2011 study-abroad tour.
  • That encounter sparked his interest in how local Totonac people understand and use the site today.
INSIGHT

Archaeology As Political Economy

  • Holley-Kline reframes archaeology as political economy linking excavation to regional production, exchange, and land use.
  • He argues archaeology also functions as resource redistribution shaping livelihoods unevenly.
INSIGHT

Land Tenure Shaped Site Boundaries

  • Changes in land tenure shaped the creation and expansion of El Tajín's site boundaries.
  • Legal separation of monuments (public) and land (private) produced conflicts resolved through negotiations based on private property norms.
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