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Transforming the Dead - Culturally Modified Bone in the Prehistoric Midwest (Hardcover, 3)
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Transforming the Dead - Culturally Modified Bone in the Prehistoric Midwest (Hardcover, 3)
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The essays in Transforming the Dead: Culturally Modified Bone in
the Prehistoric Midwest explore the numerous ways that Eastern
Woodland Native Americans selected, modified, and used human bones
as tools, trophies, ornaments, and other objects imbued with
cultural signifi cance in daily life and rituals. Transforming the
Dead is a collection of essays that examines culturally modified
human bones and their roles as "cultural and ritual objects" among
prehistoric Eastern Woodland cultures. Previous scholarship has
explored the role of human body parts in Native American cultures
as trophies of war and revered ancestors. This collection discusses
new evidence that human elements were also important components of
daily and ritual activities across the Eastern Woodlands. The
contribu tors to this volume discuss each case study within the
unique regional and temporal contexts of the material, rather than
seeking universal answers to how these objects were used. Most
research addressing modified human bone has focused on cut marks
and trauma associated with warfare, trophy taking, and burial
practices. The editors and contributors of Transforming the Dead
docu ment the varied and often overlooked ways that human bone was
intentionally modified through drilling, incising, cutting, and
polish ing for utilitarian, ornamental, spiritual, or ritual use.
Examples include bracelets and gorgets to be worn, as well as
musical rasps, pipe stems, masks, and protective talismans. The
form and function of these ob jects are not unusual; their
construction from the remains of "another" sets them apart. Through
a flexible but systematic analysis of the archaeological record,
the contributors bring into focus how the careful selection,
modifica tion, and retention of particular bones or body parts of
an individual after death offer insights into concepts of
personhood, the body, life, and death among the prehistoric Native
Americans in the Midwest.
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