Robert E. MacLaury, Ayoquesco Zapotec 1970
(1 vol. (230 p.))
497.4 M22
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Background note
After receiving his bachelor's degree in anthropology and Spanish at the University of the Americas in 1967, the cognitive
anthropologist Robert MacLaury spent two years in Santa Mara Ayoquesco de Aldama, Oaxaca, studying Zapotec (Oto-Manguean)
language and ethnography. His masters' thesis, "Ayoquesco Zapotec: Ethnography, Phonology, and Lexicon," was accepted at
the University of the Americas in 1970.
Beginning in the late-1970s, MacLaury embarked on a study of color categorization in Mexico, Guatemala, and Honduras, out
of which grew the collaborative Mesoamerican Color Survey (1978-1981). A prime architect of vantage theory -- a model of
categorization that that seeks to account for the active agency of the categorizer -- MacLaury received his doctorate in Cognitive
Anthropology from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1989, and published the results of the Mesoamerican Color Survey
as Color and Cognition in Mesoamerica: Constructing Categories as Vantages (Austin, Tex., 1997).
Scope and content
Robert E. MacLaury's "Ayoquesco Zapotec: Ethnography, Phonology, and Lexicon" was accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirements
for a master's degree in anthropology at the University of the Americas in 1970.
Administrative information
Restrictions
None.
Provenance
Gift of the author, 2003.
Preferred citation
Cite as: Robert E. MacLaury, "Ayoquesco Zapotec," (MA Thesis, University of the Americas, 1970), American Philosophical Society.
Processing information
Catalogued 2003.
Additional information
Related material
Other materials on Zapotec language and culture are located in the papers of Elsie Clews Parsons (Ms. Coll. 29) and Paul Radin
(497.3 R114), and in the work of Jaime de Angulo and Morris Swadesh included in the ACLS Committee on American Indian Languages
Collection (497.3 B63c).
The ACLS Collections also includes a later work of MacLaury's, "Karuk color: the yellow-green-blue category of Northern California."