Ethnohistory 2005 52(4):673-687; DOI:10.1215/00141801-52-4-673
Duke University Press
Chocolate, Sex, and Disorderly Women in Late-Seventeenth- and Early-Eighteenth-Century Guatemala
Martha Few
University of Arizona
Abstract.
Chocolate, in the form of a hot chocolate beverage, was widely available to
men and women of all ethnic and social groups in late-seventeenth and
early-eighteenth-century Santiago de Guatemala, the capital city of colonial
Central America. At the same time, chocolate acted as a central vehicle of
women's ritual power, used as the basis for magical potions to cast
supernatural illness, in sexual witchcraft practices, and even, at times, as a
flash point for women's disorderly behavior in public settings. The gendered
associations of chocolate with ritual power and disorder in Guatemala are
considered within the broader context of the changing cultural uses and
meanings of New World food products during European expansion in the
Americas.

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Copyright 2005 by American Society for Ethnohistory