Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehensively than ever before. However, death is now often considered medical failure, and is a virtually taboo topic of conversation in daily life. At a time when the societal relevance of archaeology is under scrutiny more than ever before, the AHRC-funded Continuing Bonds Project – a collaboration between archaeology and palliative care – explores the potential of the past to promote discussion. Not only does archaeology illuminate the diversity of practice surrounding death, the past provides a safe, distanced platform for considering death, dying and bereavement today. Through archaeological and ethnographic case studies, health and social care...
This volume addresses the relationship between archaeologists and the dead, through the many dimensi...
Engaging with the Dead adopts a cross-disciplinary, archaeologically focused, approach to explore a ...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehens...
Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehens...
YesModern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more compre...
Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehens...
While death is universal, reactions to death and ways of dealing with the dead body are hugely diver...
While death is universal, reactions to death and ways of dealing with the dead body are hugely diver...
ArticleThis Introduction to AP’s third special issue seeks to provide context and rationale to the ...
This Introduction to AP’s third special issue seeks to provide context and rationale to the study of...
Our medicalised modern cultures render reason and mystery mutually exclusive, define death by diseas...
yesProfessionals working with patients at end of life need to feel comfortable and confident discu...
This article originates from the organization of two workshops in the anthropology of death, address...
In the present as in the past, the dead have been deployed to promote visions of identity, as well a...
This volume addresses the relationship between archaeologists and the dead, through the many dimensi...
Engaging with the Dead adopts a cross-disciplinary, archaeologically focused, approach to explore a ...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehens...
Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehens...
YesModern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more compre...
Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehens...
While death is universal, reactions to death and ways of dealing with the dead body are hugely diver...
While death is universal, reactions to death and ways of dealing with the dead body are hugely diver...
ArticleThis Introduction to AP’s third special issue seeks to provide context and rationale to the ...
This Introduction to AP’s third special issue seeks to provide context and rationale to the study of...
Our medicalised modern cultures render reason and mystery mutually exclusive, define death by diseas...
yesProfessionals working with patients at end of life need to feel comfortable and confident discu...
This article originates from the organization of two workshops in the anthropology of death, address...
In the present as in the past, the dead have been deployed to promote visions of identity, as well a...
This volume addresses the relationship between archaeologists and the dead, through the many dimensi...
Engaging with the Dead adopts a cross-disciplinary, archaeologically focused, approach to explore a ...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...