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E-grāmata: Engaging with the Dead: Exploring Changing Human Beliefs about Death, Mortality and the Human Body

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Presents important new insights into our understanding and interpretation of past mortuary practices, by integrating archaeological data with theoretical and evidential studies of modern funerary practices, ethnograhpy, theology and textual anaysis

Engaging with the Dead adopts a cross-disciplinary, archaeologically focused, approach to explore a variety of themes linked to the interpretation of mortuary traditions, death and the ways of disposing of the dead. Nineteen papers highlight the current vitality of ‘death studies’ and the potential of future research and discoveries. contributors explore changing beliefs and practices over time, considering how modern archaeology, ethnography and historical records can aid our interpretations of the past, as well as considering how past practices may have influenced understandings of death and dying within the modern world. It is clear that there are very significant variations in the quantity of dead that appear in the archaeological record over time, and the contributions to this volume attempt to understand why that might be the case. By bringing together papers from a variety of specialists working within Europe and the Near East, we investigate the pivotal role of death studies in the 21st century, providing a case for the retention of human remains in archaeological collections. Engaging with the Dead aims to set period specific contributions within a broader perspective and integrates papers from bioarchaeologists, theologists, textual specialists, as well as archaeologists. It provides an in-depth introduction to the multitude of ways in which the mortuary record can be interrogated and interpreted and explores the role of archaeology and theology within contemporary social studies. This volume challenges our current understanding and conceptualisation of mortuary practices in the ancient and contemporary world.

Recenzijas

Though Middle East heavy, the volume is stimulating with many interesting ideas. It views 'mortuary rituals' from different and varied perspectives. * The Archaeological Journal * [ This book] has a large A4 format which gives room for the images, diagrams and tables to do their work. [ ] Two papers are outstanding for their content. The paper [ Living with the Dead, Past and Present] has a clear goal and is novel in its combination of mortuary archaeology with contemporary psychological theory. * Time and Mind *

Chapter 1 Introduction: Engaging with the dead
1(6)
Jennie Bradbury
Chris Scarre
Chapter 2 Tracking the dead in the Neolithic: The `Invisible Dead' in Britain
7(17)
Mandy Jay
Chris Scarre
Chapter 3 Mind the gap... what did Late Bronze Age people do with their dead? Evidence from Cliffs End, Kent
24(16)
Jacqueline I. McKinley
Chapter 4 Romano-British rural burial practices in south-east England
40(11)
Alexander Smith
Chapter 5 Iron Age mortuary practices and beliefs in the Southern Levant
51(16)
David Ilan
Chapter 6 Taphonomy of human remains exposed in burial chambers, with special reference to Near Eastern hypogea, ossuaries and burial caves
67(10)
Arkadiusz Soltysiak
Rqfal A. Fetner
Chapter 7 Protracted burial practices and cremation in the ancient Near East: Two independent phenomena?
77(10)
Candida Felli
Chapter 8 Shifting identities: The human corpse and treatment of the dead in the Levantine Bronze Age
87(16)
Jennie Bradbury
Graham Philip
Chapter 9 Looking forward to look back: How investigations of historical burial populations can inform our interpretations of prehistoric burial practice
103(14)
Amanda Murphy
Andrew Chamberlain
Chapter 10 Developing and implementing `big picture' approaches in bioarchaeology: Opportunities and challenges
117(12)
Charlotte Roberts
Chapter 11 Dead and (un)buried: Reconstructing attitudes to death in long-term perspective
129(9)
Mike Parker Pearson
Chapter 12 Reanimating the dead: The circulation of human bone in the British Later Bronze Age
138(11)
Joanna Bruck
Chapter 13 Cultural memory and the invisible dead: The role of `old objects' in burial contexts
149(14)
Peter Pfalzner
Chapter 14 The visible dead: Ethnographic perspectives on the curation, display and circulation of human remains in Iron Age Britain
163(11)
Ian Armit
Chapter 15 The distribution of graves and the food within: Evidence from late 3rd to 2nd millennia BC Mari, Syria
174(14)
Sarah Lange
Chapter 16 Variations on a tomb: The Umm el-Marra mortuary complex in the context of elite burial ritual in 3rd-millennium western Syria
188(13)
Sarah Yukich
Chapter 17 Living with the dead, past and present: A reinterpretation of Southwest Asia's Neolithic mortuary practices in light of contemporary theories of bereavement
201(9)
Karina Croucher
Chapter 18 Materiality, identity, mutability: Irresolvable tensions within burial reform
210(7)
Julie Rugg
Chapter 19 Beyond the Invisible Dead: Future priorities, opportunities and challenges
217(3)
Jennie Bradbury
Chris Scarre
Acknowledgements 220
Jennie Bradbury is Senior Research Associate on the Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East & North Africa (EAMENA) project at the University of Oxford. She is a Near Eastern archaeologist, with research interests in traditions of burial in the ancient near east, landscape archaeology, GIS and remote sensing and society and social complexity. Christopher Scarre is Professor of Archaeology at Durham University, and specialises in the Neolithic monumentality of the Atlantic faēade of Europe. He has excavated at megalithic monuments in western France, Portugal and the Channel Islands.