The discussions in this article relate to the already existing literature about bodies in museum exhibitions and the tension between humanization and dehumanization, individualization and objectification. It approaches the archaeological exhibition practice called “forensic art”. Forensic art means giving a face and identity to human skeletons through specific methods. The point of departure is three different reconstructions based on the remains of two Stone Age women presented at two different museums, one in Norway and one in Sweden, from the beginning of the 1990s until 2006. These reconstructions are highlighted here as entangled and related objects. The article explores the tensions that arise between bodies as scientific objects and ...
The introduction into the issues discussed in the book 'Aesthetics in Archaeology' (no. 3) is entitl...
Since the late 1970s human remains in museum collections have been subject to claims and controversi...
This study examines uncontested human remains from a staff- and institutional perspective in Scandin...
Museum exhibits, as showcases of what is deemed worth seeing at a period in time, reflect societal b...
Collecting and displaying bodies, a practice giving once living people the anomalous status of ‘obje...
This thesis gives an insight into some of the collections and exhibitions of human remains that are ...
In this article, I present results from recent ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Scandinavian muse...
In the discipline of archaeology death has always been a common subject. Graves and dead bodies in d...
Key points: 71 institutions visited. 860 hominin representations assessed. Earlier hominins are trea...
This thesis explores bodily representations in Late Iron Age Scandinavia (400–1050 AD). Non-human bo...
This thesis explores bodily representations in Late Iron Age Scandinavia (400–1050 AD). Non-human bo...
This thesis studies the narratives conveyed in 36 Swedish archaeological exhibitions. The aim is to ...
Archaeological representation is a relatively new field of inquiry in the discipline, focusing on th...
Bodies intrigue us. They promise windows into the past that other archaeological finds cannot by bri...
This study focuses on the attitudes of museumgoers toward the exhibition of human remains in modern ...
The introduction into the issues discussed in the book 'Aesthetics in Archaeology' (no. 3) is entitl...
Since the late 1970s human remains in museum collections have been subject to claims and controversi...
This study examines uncontested human remains from a staff- and institutional perspective in Scandin...
Museum exhibits, as showcases of what is deemed worth seeing at a period in time, reflect societal b...
Collecting and displaying bodies, a practice giving once living people the anomalous status of ‘obje...
This thesis gives an insight into some of the collections and exhibitions of human remains that are ...
In this article, I present results from recent ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Scandinavian muse...
In the discipline of archaeology death has always been a common subject. Graves and dead bodies in d...
Key points: 71 institutions visited. 860 hominin representations assessed. Earlier hominins are trea...
This thesis explores bodily representations in Late Iron Age Scandinavia (400–1050 AD). Non-human bo...
This thesis explores bodily representations in Late Iron Age Scandinavia (400–1050 AD). Non-human bo...
This thesis studies the narratives conveyed in 36 Swedish archaeological exhibitions. The aim is to ...
Archaeological representation is a relatively new field of inquiry in the discipline, focusing on th...
Bodies intrigue us. They promise windows into the past that other archaeological finds cannot by bri...
This study focuses on the attitudes of museumgoers toward the exhibition of human remains in modern ...
The introduction into the issues discussed in the book 'Aesthetics in Archaeology' (no. 3) is entitl...
Since the late 1970s human remains in museum collections have been subject to claims and controversi...
This study examines uncontested human remains from a staff- and institutional perspective in Scandin...