Cultivating Corpses: A Comparative Approach to Disembodied Mortuary Remains

Authors

  • Anders Kaliff Dept. of Archaeology and Ancient History Uppsala University
  • Terje Oestigaard Centre for Development Studies, University of Bergen

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37718/CSA.2004.05

Keywords:

Analogy, astu, cremation, grave, Nepal, Scandinavian Bronze Age, Scandinavian Iron Age

Abstract

Disembodied remains of corpses are often found in the archaeological record but seldom interpreted and understood. This mortuary practice challenges our traditional understanding of funerals and what constitutcs a "grave". Through a comparative analysis of prehistoric Bronze Age and Iron Age mortuary remai ns and contemporary funeral practices in Nepal, it is argued that the disembodiment is a cosmogonic act whereby the corpse is an intrinsic part of the agricultural and hydrological cycle. An explicit combination of the past and present for interpretations of the past is a premise for understanding and knowledge production in archaeology, and this theoretical stance is developed and explored.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2004-12-28

How to Cite

Kaliff, A. and Oestigaard, T. (2004) “Cultivating Corpses: A Comparative Approach to Disembodied Mortuary Remains”, Current Swedish Archaeology, 12(1), pp. 83–104. doi: 10.37718/CSA.2004.05.

Issue

Section

Research Articles