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Life After Life: Bioarchaeology and Post-mortem Agency

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 November 2014

Bettina Arnold*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, 290 Sabin Hall, P.O. Box 413, 3413 N. Downer Ave, Milwaukee, WI 53201, USA Email: barnold@uwm.edu

Abstract

In the alternative fairy tale The Princess Bride, as William Goldman's character Miracle Max reanimates the apparent corpse of the hero Westley, he tells the anxious group observing the procedure: ‘There's a big difference between mostly dead and all dead. Mostly dead is slightly alive’ (Goldman 2007, 313). Only a select group of the dead can be characterized as being ‘slightly alive’, in the post-mortem agency sense, however, and the case studies presented here explore the many ways in which this subcategory of mostly dead individuals have engaged with and continue to impact the living in the past as well as today. Several themes emerge as especially salient: the iteration in the death-scape of the dynamic tension between the individual and the social group, which can result in transgression as well as conformity in the disposition of the body and its effects on the living; the symbolic capital represented by some dead bodies and the ways in which their potency may be affected by various forms of contextual association; and the ways in which the manipulation of the dead for political purposes is subject to constraints specific to the cultural contexts in which these interactions take place.

Type
Special Section: The Bioarchaeology of Postmortem Agency
Copyright
Copyright © The McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research 2014 

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