The Poetics of Processing: Memory formation, cosmology and the handling of the dead
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 81st Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL (2016)
Throughout time, the human body has acted as a canvas for survivors. Processing of the body varies in time and space and is contingent upon the relationship between the living and the dead. Body processing acts as a mechanism for the recreation of cosmological events and is important for memory creation. The creation of processed bodies has the capacity to transform space, ritually open and close spaces, and to reinforce relationships between the living and the dead. This session will focus on how the processing of the body, in any way that occurs, impacts and is impacted by the use of the body as a social tool.
By including both old and new world case studies, general patterns of human behavior can be compared and contrasted. Through a large-scale analysis, we can examine common threads of the use of the body as a social tool that builds a relationship between the living and the dead, memory creation, and the use of space for both the living and the dead.
Other Keywords
bioarchaeology •
mortuary practices •
Ritual •
Mortuary Customs •
Processing •
Cannibalism •
Mortuary Practice •
Inhumations •
Warfare •
Violence
Geographic Keywords
North America - Southwest •
South America •
AFRICA •
West Asia •
North America - Great Basin
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-11 of 11)
- Documents (11)
- BODIES AMONG FRAGMENTS: NON-NORMATIVE INHUMATIONS AMONG THE PRECLASSIC AND CLASSIC PERIOD HOHOKAM IN THE TUCSON BASIN (2016)
- Dissection as Social Process: Anatomical Products in the Nineteenth-century United States (2016)
- Memory and mortuary practice in Neolithic Anatolia (2016)
- Narration, Mediation, and Transformation: Dismembered Heads from Middle Horizon Uraca (Majes Valley, Arequipa, Peru) and the Andean Feline-Hunter Mythology (2016)
- A Neolithic Irregular Burial at Çatalhöyük (Turkey) (2016)
- The Poetics of Corpse Fragmentation and Processing in the Ancient Southwest (2016)
- Postmortem Human Body Manipulation in the Mid-Chincha Valley, Peru (2016)
- Ritual for the Ancestors or Acts of Violence: Biocultural assessment of culturally modified human remains (2016)
- Ritual Modification in the Context of Social Unrest in the Northern San Juan (2016)
- Smiting Pharaohs: Violence and Power in Ancient Egypt (2016)
- Stone Bodies and Second Lives: Preserving the Person in Ancient Ethiopia (2016)