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Bodies from the Bog: Metamorphosis, Non-Human Agency and the Making of 'Collective' Memory

並列摘要


This essay is about bog bodies-the preserved remains of prehistoric humans, often interpreted as ritual killings, found in peat bogs across northwest Europe. It considers the production of knowledge about the human past as a complex, relational process implicating multiple actors and traversing the terms of any straightforward nature-culture binary. It argues that theorizations of collective memory-and in particular of its 'collective' aspect-need to pay closer attention, both to the role of non-human agencies in the shaping of humanly intelligible artefacts and histories and to the relationship between preservation and transformation as a constitutive feature of collective memory. By way of illustration, it traces in some detail the story of one particular bog body, from death and deposition in the ground through rediscovery, excavation, archaeological analysis and subsequent public display.

並列關鍵字

memory metamorphosis nature/culture non-human agency

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