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Bereavement and Commemoration: An Archaeology of Mortality

ISBN: 978-0-631-20613-2

June 1999

Wiley-Blackwell

224 pages

Description
This book provides an historical archaeology of death, burial and bereavement from the Reformation to the present.
About the Author
Sarah Tarlow is a Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Wales, Lampeter, where she teaches courses in the archaeology of death, later historical periods and aspects of archaeological method and theory. Since receiving her PhD in archaeology from Cambridge University, she has published articles on the later historical archaeology of Britain and on the archaeology of death. Her current research interests are in archaeologies of the human body and in utopian communities. She is co-editor of The Familiar Past? Archaeologies of Later Historical Britain (1998).
Features

  • Provides an introduction to the study of death and remembrance in the past.

  • Focuses not only on material culture but also on theories of emotion and experience in the context of death.

  • Includes insights from outside archaeology, drawing on literary and historical sources.