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Death Embodied - Archaeological approaches to the treatment of the corpse (Paperback)
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Death Embodied - Archaeological approaches to the treatment of the corpse (Paperback)
Series: Studies in Funerary Archaeology, 9
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In April 1485, a marble sarcophagus was found on the outskirts of
Rome. It contained the remains of a young Roman woman so
well-preserved that she appeared to have only just died and the
sarcophagus was placed on public view, attracting great crowds.
Such a find reminds us of the power of the dead body to evoke in
the minds of living people, be they contemporary (survivors or
mourners) or distanced from the remains by time, a range of
emotions and physical responses, ranging from fascination to fear,
and from curiosity to disgust. Archaeological interpretations of
burial remains can often suggest that the skeletons which we
uncover, and therefore usually associate with past funerary
practices, were what was actually deposited in graves, rather than
articulated corpses. The choices made by past communities or
individuals about how to cope with a dead body in all of its
dynamic and constituent forms, and whether there was reason to
treat it in a manner that singled it out (positively or negatively)
as different from other human corpses, provide the stimulus for
this volume. The nine papers provide a series of theoretically
informed, but not constrained, case studies which focus
predominantly on the corporeal body in death. The aims are to take
account of the active presence of dynamic material bodies at the
heart of funerary events and to explore the questions that might be
asked about their treatment; to explore ways of putting fleshed
bodies back into our discussions of burials and mortuary treatment,
as well as interpreting the meaning of these activities in relation
to the bodies of both deceased and survivors; and to combine the
insights that body-centred analysis can produce to contribute to a
more nuanced understanding of the role of the body, living and
dead, in past cultures.
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