Popol Vuh 2 Electric Boogaloo

The reader’s guide states explicitly, “The epic is not the story of a hero, but hero twins” (p. 246). The Popol Vuh is a story of pluralities at any given moment: the twins, their father and uncle, One Death and Seven Death, the Framer and the Shaper, and so on. I found this most interesting as there is not a single first man, or a single first woman, but instead they come in quartets; clearly, a group of people is more powerful than a single being by K’iche’ standards. The cosmic force of the universe is made up of a conversation between multiple persons, the Earth coming into existence from the statement, “Earth”. This, to me, reflects the Popol Vuh’s statements on not only community, but power as well.

It speaks volumes that the power that the two twins seem to possess come from their understanding of their own world and deities, working to praise them and help them out and, in the case of the Lords of Death, learn their names. The Lords of Death are able to be defeated because each of them work as separate barriers, rather than working together to form one force, like the Framer and the Shaper do. The inherent motif to take away from these stories is that the respect, worship, and maintaining of relationships will provide power in both daily life (like the maize farm) and in eccentric circumstances (like Xibalba). It is, in this way, also a conversation about community.

Community is woven into almost every storyline, from the animals swallowing each other as a form of transportation (and an origin to the food chain) to the twins grandmother truly coming to care and worry for them. What I find most interesting about the community motifs is how they divide themselves from animals most of the time: monkeys are seen as hilarious creatures, and animals are told to give up their flesh as a sacrifice for not being able to worship. A sharp line is drawn down the middle between animal and human, and one has much more power than the other. Still, the animals serve as functional to the people beyond being meat; animals help the twins discover the gaming things, and ants help them gather flowers for One and Seven Death. It begs asking where animals fit in the Maya K’iche’ idea of personhood and community.

It’s not unfamiliar for Indigeneity to hold community so near and dear, and I think that the fact that this theme is present is a good connection internationally to other Indigenous communities, something Western concepts don’t always have. Instead, Western ideals present the singular hero archetype, or the one almighty being. Looking to Indigenous legends and traditions provides us with a new peek into what a community-drive power source can look like in myth. Still, I ask, how do conversation and community include or reject animals in a creation myth about humanity?

3 Thoughts.

  1. In a way, the Popol Vuh encourages community, and I feel it is emphasized by how the twins aren’t really differentiable. There is no real difference between the two brothers neither in terms of personality or strengths. This made me basically see them as one entity, which may be what the text was getting at. It also explains why they have to be twins despite basically all of the actions done could be done by a guy with their powers instead.

  2. The importance and value of community also stood out to me in Parts 3 and 4, and one aspect that you touched on that I find so interesting is the clear divide between humans and animals. I agree with all of your points, and also want to add that the twins were extremely violent towards the animals when they weren’t helping the twins, and even tortured/beat them to convince them to help in some cases, but when they were helping them they gave them gifts/titles, which clearly solidifies the power dynamic between humans and animals in the text and as we see today.

  3. I too noticed the importance of community cooperation in the work, but I guess I didin’t see this delineation between man and nature so clearly. Since the twins are sort of Demi-gods, I read their dominion and demands on the animals more as a Lord speaking to their subjects, they are divinely endowed with power over nature. I guess this division isn’t as clear to me because it seems as though, much like the duties or abilities given to the animals, the job of humans seems to be to worship or glorify the gods. To me, it felt like the work almost made a concerted effort not to divide humans from the rest of nature

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