ABSTRACT
Archaeological Perspectives on Burial Practices and Societal Change examines the relationships between burial practices and societal transformations in the past.
This book highlights the centrality of burials as archaeological material for the understanding of societal change. It critically reassesses past approaches, and suggests new ways of understanding the relationship between burial practice and change in archaeology. Particular attention is given to archaeological periods where change was especially intense: so-called transition periods. The volume has a wide chronological and geographical scope, spanning the Early Bronze Age to the present day, and ranging geographically from Cyprus to Scandinavia. Recent developments within archaeological methods and theory have sparked discussions about the mechanisms and reasons behind societal changes in the past. This book aims to revive interest in understanding and explaining these changes, which are fundamental questions to the discipline of archaeology. The volume is organised into three thematic parts. The first, Practices, Communities, and Agents of Change, examines the roles individuals and communities play in transforming burial customs, highlighting the non-linear and often chaotic nature of these changes. The second theme, Migration, Identities, and Narratives of Change, challenges traditional narratives of migration and identity formation, proposing more nuanced understandings of how burial practices encapsulate these complex processes. The final theme, Transitions, Tempos, and Complexities, explores the multifaceted nature of societal transitions, emphasising the importance of diverse tempos and scales in understanding these shifts.
Archaeological Perspectives on Burial Practices and Societal Change is for students and researchers in archaeology, primarily mortuary archaeology and archaeological theory.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |20 pages
Introduction
part Theme 1|62 pages
Practices, communities, and agents of change
chapter 3|15 pages
Grave participants
chapter 4|15 pages
Change and continuity
chapter 5|15 pages
Dying well in a damaged planet
part Theme 2|68 pages
Migration, identities, and narratives of change
chapter 6|17 pages
The urning question
chapter 7|15 pages
The Viking-period burials of the Hebrides
chapter 8|18 pages
Narrating ethnic identity and competition in Lombard southern Italy through burial practices (6th–7th centuries)
part Theme 3|68 pages
Transitions, tempos, and complexities
chapter 10|16 pages
Building the Christian cemetery
chapter 11|17 pages
Cypriot burial practices at the close of the Bronze Age
chapter 13|16 pages
Rethinking burial practices and period transitions through a posthumanist and new materialist lens
part |14 pages
Concluding remarks
