'Body-objects’ and personhood in the Iron and Viking Ages: processing, curating, and depositing skulls in domestic space

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Abstract

This article explores practices of processing, displaying, and depositing human and animal crania in built environments and wetlands in the long Iron Age of Scandinavia. The paper first reports on a dataset of a range of practices targeting heads over the first millennium CE, with a particular focus on deposition of crania in built environments. I subsequently present a two-fold analysis of these data: an exploration of how reworking bodies into cranial objects transformed personhood in complex ways, and a discussion of how the particular practices afforded to the head connects with practices of placemaking and atmospheric intervention. I consider reworked, displayed and deposited heads as ‘body-objects’ – a different kind of being than ‘person’, ’animal’ or ‘thing’ that breaks open some
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftWorld Archaeology
Vol/bind52
Udgave nummer1
Antal sider17
ISSN0043-8243
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2020
Udgivet eksterntJa

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