Since the late 1970s human remains in museum collections have been subject to claims and controversies, such as demands for repatriation by indigenous groups who suffered under colonization. These requests have been strongly contested by scientists who research the material and consider it unique evidence. This book charts the influences at play on the contestation over human remains and examines the construction of this problem from a cultural perspective. It shows that claims on dead bodies are not confined to once colonized groups. A group of British Pagans, Honouring the Ancient Dead, formed to make claims on skeletons from the British Isles. And ancient human remains, bog bodies and Egyptian mummies, which have not been requested by an...
In 2019 media articles about clearance of human remains at a museum in Gothenburg caught my attentio...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous peoples collected within a colonial context has ...
Collecting and displaying bodies, a practice giving once living people the anomalous status of ‘obje...
The contestation over human remains in museum collections among indigenous groups, archaeologists, a...
Museum exhibits, as showcases of what is deemed worth seeing at a period in time, reflect societal b...
This study examines uncontested human remains from a staff- and institutional perspective in Scandin...
In the past three decades, human remains in museum collections have become the focus of contestation...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous people collected within a colonial context has b...
Controversy about museums ’ possession and exhibition of human remains has usually affected those id...
Many museums and other scientific institutions still possessing the bodily remains of Indigenous peo...
Human remains are a unique type of archaeological artifact because of the emotional and cultural tie...
The collection and display of human remains has long been accepted within many cultures and religion...
Our Sacred Sites, Contested Rites/Rights project examines contemporary Pagan engagements with pasts ...
Within UK museums socio-cultural shifts around the conceptualisation of the dead body, in part drive...
This thesis uses ethnographic field research and literature analysis to examine the somet...
In 2019 media articles about clearance of human remains at a museum in Gothenburg caught my attentio...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous peoples collected within a colonial context has ...
Collecting and displaying bodies, a practice giving once living people the anomalous status of ‘obje...
The contestation over human remains in museum collections among indigenous groups, archaeologists, a...
Museum exhibits, as showcases of what is deemed worth seeing at a period in time, reflect societal b...
This study examines uncontested human remains from a staff- and institutional perspective in Scandin...
In the past three decades, human remains in museum collections have become the focus of contestation...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous people collected within a colonial context has b...
Controversy about museums ’ possession and exhibition of human remains has usually affected those id...
Many museums and other scientific institutions still possessing the bodily remains of Indigenous peo...
Human remains are a unique type of archaeological artifact because of the emotional and cultural tie...
The collection and display of human remains has long been accepted within many cultures and religion...
Our Sacred Sites, Contested Rites/Rights project examines contemporary Pagan engagements with pasts ...
Within UK museums socio-cultural shifts around the conceptualisation of the dead body, in part drive...
This thesis uses ethnographic field research and literature analysis to examine the somet...
In 2019 media articles about clearance of human remains at a museum in Gothenburg caught my attentio...
The repatriation of the human remains of Indigenous peoples collected within a colonial context has ...
Collecting and displaying bodies, a practice giving once living people the anomalous status of ‘obje...