In the Andes, a long history of research on burial records and
burial contexts exists for the purpose of reconstructing cultural
affiliation, chronology, socioeconomic status, grave content, and
human body treatment. Less attention is paid to the larger question
of how mortuary practices functioned in different cultures. "Tombs
for the Living: Andean Mortuary Practices" (originally released in
1995) examines this broader issue by looking at the mortuary
practices that created a connection between the living and the
dead; the role of wealth and ancestors in cosmological schemes; the
location, construction, and sociopolitical implications of tombs
and cemeteries; and the art and iconography of death. By examining
rich sets of archaeological, ethnographic, and ethnohistoric data,
the thirteen essays continue to enrich our understanding of the
context and meaning of the mortuary traditions in the Andes.
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