Limit search to available items
Book Cover
E-book

Title Transforming the dead : culturally modified bone in the prehistoric Midwest / edited by Eve A. Hargrave, Shirley J. Schermer, Kristin M. Hedman, and Robin M. Lillie
Published Tuscaloosa : The University Alabama Press, 2015

Copies

Description 1 online resource
Contents 1. Transforming the Dead / Shirley J. Schermer, Eve A. Hargrave, Kristin M. Hedman, and Robin M. Lillie -- I. Woodland Period -- 2. A Taphonomic Analysis of Hopewellian Modified Trophy Jaws / Stephen P. Nawrocki and Paul D. Emanovsky -- 3. Objectifying Middle Woodland Mortuary Practices through the Inclusion of Modified Human Jaws : A Central Illinois River Valley Case Study / Dawn E. Cobb -- 4. More than Skulls and Mandibles : Culturally Modified Human Remains from Woodland Contexts in Ohio / Cheryl A. Johnston -- 5. Arrangement of Human Remains and Artifacts in Scioto Hopewell Burials : Dramatic Rituals or Ritual Dramas? / Christopher Carr and Anna Novotny -- 6. Phallic Batons Made of Bone in the Collections of the Ohio Historical Society / Anne B. Lee and Cheryl A. Johnston -- 7. Excised and Drilled Human Bone from Eastern Iowa Woodland Sites / Shirley J. Schermer and Robin M. Lillie -- II. Mississippian Period -- 8. Life after Death : A Brief History of Human Bone Tools in Submound 51 at Cahokia / Eve A. Hargrave and Della Collins Cook -- 9. Opportunity Knocks : Nonritual Use of Human Bone at the Aztalan Site, Jefferson County, Wisconsin / Katie J. Zejdlik -- 10. Vessel, Ornament, Mask, or Rattle? : Reconstructing a Mississippian Worked Bone Object from the Angel Site / Della Collins Cook and Cheryl Ann Munson -- 11. Modification of Human Bone from Mississippian Caborn-Welborn Phase Sites in Southwestern Indiana and West-Central Kentucky / Cheryl Ann Munson, Della Collins Cook, and Mary Lucas Powell -- III. Late Prehistoric Period -- 12. Human Bone as Ritual Object? : Modified Human Bone from the Hoxie Farm and Anker Sites, Cook County, Illinois / Kristin M. Hedman -- 13. Grooved Teeth from Red Wing Locality Sites and the Loss or Gain of Identity / Kathleen T. Blue -- 14. Design Motifs and Other Modifications of Human Bone from Iowa Late Prehistoric Oneota Sites / Robin M. Lillie and Shirley J. Schermer -- IV. Perspectives -- 15. The Meaning of Scalping in Native North America / Linea Sundstrom -- 16. Contextualizing the Precolumbian Postmortem "Life" of Modified Human Remains / Maria Ostendorf Smith
Summary "Transforming the Dead, is a collection of essays that examines culturally modified human bones and their roles as 'cultural and ritual objects' among prehistoric Eastern Woodland cultures. Previous scholarship has explored the role of human body parts in Native American cultures as trophies of war and revered ancestors. This collection discusses new evidence that human elements were also important components of daily and ritual activities across the Eastern Woodlands. The contributors to this volume discuss each case study within the unique regional and temporal contexts of the material, rather than seeking universal answers to how these objects were used. Most research addressing modified human bone has focused on cut marks and trauma associated with warfare, trophy taking, and burial practices. The editors and contributors of Transforming the Dead document the varied and often overlooked ways that human bone was intentionally modified through drilling, incising, cutting, and polishing for utilitarian, ornamental, spiritual, or ritual use. Examples include bracelets and gorgets to be worn, as well as musical rasps, pipe stems, masks, and protective talismans. The form and function of these objects are not unusual; their construction from the remains of 'another' sets them apart. Through a flexible but systematic analysis of the archaeological record, the contributors bring into focus how the careful selection, modification, and retention of particular bones or body parts of an individual after death offer insights into concepts of personhood, the body, life, and death among the prehistoric Native Americans in the Midwest"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Social archaeology -- Middle West
Material culture -- Middle West -- History -- To 1500
Indians of North America -- Warfare -- Middle West -- History -- To 1500
Indians of North America -- Funeral customs and rites -- Middle West -- History -- To 1500
Military trophies -- Middle West -- History -- To 1500
Burial -- Middle West -- History -- To 1500
Human remains (Archaeology) -- Middle West
Bones -- Social aspects -- Middle West -- History
Woodland culture -- Middle West
HISTORY -- Native American.
RELIGION -- Ethnic & Tribal.
RELIGION -- Antiquities & Archaeology.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Physical.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Archaeology.
HISTORY -- United States -- State & Local -- General.
HISTORY -- United States -- State & Local -- Midwest (IA, IL, IN, KS, MI, MN, MO, ND, NE, OH, SD, WI)
Antiquities
Burial
Human remains (Archaeology)
Indians of North America -- Funeral customs and rites
Indians of North America -- Warfare
Material culture
Military trophies
Social archaeology
Woodland culture
SUBJECT Middle West -- Antiquities
Subject Middle West
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Lillie, Robin M
Hedman, Kristin
Schermer, Shirley J., 1946-
Hargrave, Eve A
ISBN 9780817388096
0817388095