Learning About Death and Burial: Mortuary Ritual, Emotion and Communities of Practice in the Ancient Andes

IF 1.6 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY CAMBRIDGE ARCHAEOLOGICAL JOURNAL Pub Date : 2022-11-21 DOI:10.1017/S0959774322000324
S. Baitzel
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Abstract

Mortuary rituals are conservative and transformative. As practices of hands-on and conceptual learning, memory making, and inter-generational knowledge transfer they take place within Communities of Practice, where emotionality and temporalities shape learning about death, interment, and commemoration. Drawing on mortuary, ethnographic, and archaeothanatological evidence, this paper explores how inhabitants of the provincial Tiwanaku site Omo M10 (eighth–twelfth centuries ce) in southern Peru experienced and learned death and burial. The reconstruction of three stages of funerary ritual—body preparation, interment, and remembering—represents distinct episodes of bundling. During each stage, increasingly more diverse participants, materials, spaces, and activities differentially shape episodic memory formation and knowledge transfer. I propose that coming to understand the constituent participants, practices, and knowledge of mortuary ritual as emergent and heterogeneous Communities of Practice has important implications for the interpretation of synchronic and diachronic mortuary variability.
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关于死亡和埋葬的学习:古代安第斯山脉的丧葬仪式、情感和实践社区
殡葬仪式是保守和变革的。作为实践和概念学习、记忆制作和代际知识转移的实践,它们发生在实践社区内,在实践社区中,情感和时间性塑造了对死亡、埋葬和纪念的学习。本文利用太平间、人种学和考古学证据,探讨了秘鲁南部蒂瓦纳库省级遗址Omo M10(公元前8-12世纪)的居民是如何经历和学习死亡和埋葬的。葬礼仪式的三个阶段——遗体准备、安葬和记忆——的重建代表了不同的捆绑事件。在每个阶段,越来越多样化的参与者、材料、空间和活动不同地塑造了情景记忆的形成和知识转移。我认为,将太平间仪式的组成参与者、实践和知识理解为新兴和异质的实践共同体,对解释太平间的共时性和历时性可变性具有重要意义。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Cambridge Archaeological Journal is the leading journal for cognitive and symbolic archaeology. It provides a forum for innovative, descriptive and theoretical archaeological research, paying particular attention to the role and development of human intellectual abilities and symbolic beliefs and practices. Specific topics covered in recent issues include: the use of cultural neurophenomenology for the understanding of Maya religious belief, agency and the individual, new approaches to rock art and shamanism, the significance of prehistoric monuments, ritual behaviour on Pacific Islands, and body metamorphosis in prehistoric boulder artworks. In addition to major articles and shorter notes, the Cambridge Archaeological Journal includes review features on significant recent books.
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