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Death Rituals, Social Order and the Archaeology of Immortality in the Ancient World : 'Death Shall Have No Dominion'
Buddhist and Non-Buddhist Mortuary Traditions in Ancient India: Stūpas, Relics, and the Archaeological Landscape
edited-book
Author(s):
Julia Shaw
Publication date:
October 30 2015
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
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The rites of passage
A. Gennep
,
van Gennep
,
Arnold GENNEP
…
(1960)
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Death in banaras
J. PARRY
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P. Parry J.
,
Jonathan PARRY
…
(1994)
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Buddhiststupaand Thai social practice
Denis Byrne
(1995)
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Book Chapter
Publication date:
October 30 2015
Pages
: 382-403
DOI:
10.1017/CBO9781316014509.024
SO-VID:
8bb5a40e-da4e-4874-b196-b27e987d2f20
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Book chapters
pp. xxiii
Preface
pp. 1
‘The Unanswered Question’: Investigating Early Conceptualisations of Death
pp. 15
Non-Human Animal Responses towards the Dead and Death: A Comparative Approach to Understanding the Evolution of Human Mortuary Practices
pp. 27
Lower and Middle Palaeolithic Mortuary Behaviours and the Origins of Ritual Burial
pp. 45
Upper Palaeolithic Mortuary Practices: Reflection of Ethnic Affiliation, Social Complexity, and Cultural Turnover
pp. 65
Gathering of the Dead? The Early Neolithic Sanctuaries of Göbekli Tepe, Southeastern Turkey
pp. 82
Death and Architecture: The Pre-Pottery Neolithic A Burials at WF16, Wadi Faynan, Southern Jordan
pp. 111
Corporealities of Death in the Central Andes (ca. 9000–2000 BC)
pp. 130
Mediating the Dominion of Death in Prehistoric Malta
pp. 138
House Societies and Founding Ancestors in Early Neolithic Britain
pp. 153
Constructing Ancestors in Sub-Saharan Africa
pp. 168
Different Kinds of Dead: Presencing Andean Expired Beings
pp. 187
Putting Death in Its Place: The Idea of the Cemetery
pp. 200
Becoming Mycenaean? The Living, the Dead, and the Ancestors in the Transformation of Society in Second Millennium BC Southern Greece
pp. 223
Life and Death in Late Prehistoric to Early Historic Mesopotamia
pp. 237
The Big Sleep: Early Maya Mortuary Practice
pp. 255
De-Paradoxisation of Paradoxes by Referring to Death as an Ultimate Paradox: The Case of the State-Formation Phase of Japan
pp. 280
Death and Mortuary Rituals in Mainland Southeast Asia: From Hunter-Gatherers to the God Kings of Angkor
pp. 303
How Did the Mycenaeans Remember? Death, Matter, and Memory in the Early Mycenaean World
pp. 315
Eternal Glory: The Origins of Eastern Jade Burial and Its Far-Reaching Influence
pp. 328
Eventful Deaths – Eventful Lives? Bronze Age Mortuary Practices in the Late Prehistoric Eurasian Steppes of Central Russia (2100–1500 BC)
pp. 351
Northern Iroquoian Deathways and the Re-imagination of Community
pp. 371
Locating a Sense of Immortality in Early Egyptian Cemeteries
pp. 382
Buddhist and Non-Buddhist Mortuary Traditions in Ancient India: Stūpas, Relics, and the Archaeological Landscape
pp. 404
Killing Mummies: On Inka Epistemology and Imperial Power
pp. 425
‘Death Shall Have No Dominion’: A Response
pp. 430
Comments: Death Shall Have No Dominion
pp. 436
The Muse of Archaeology
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