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Keeping the dead close: grief and bereavement in the treatment of skulls from the Neolithic Middle East

Publication Date
2018
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© 2018 Taylor & Francis. The Version of Record of this manuscript has been published and is available in Mortality at https://doi.org/10.1080/13576275.2017.1319347.
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Yes
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openAccess
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Abstract
Theories of Continuing Bonds, and more recently, the Dual Process of Grieving, have provided new ways of understanding the bereavement process, and have influenced current practice for counsellors, end-oflife care practitioners and other professionals. This paper uses these theories in a new way, exploring their relevance to archaeological interpretation, with particular reference to the phenomenon of the plastering of skulls of the deceased in the Neolithic of Southwest Asia (the Middle East/Near East), suggesting that traditional archaeological interpretations, which focus on concepts of status and social organisation, may be missing a more basic reaction to grief and a desire to keep the dead close for longer.
Version
Accepted manuscript
Citation
Croucher KT (2018) Keeping the dead close: grief and bereavement in the treatment of skulls from the Neolithic Middle East. Mortality. 23(2): 103-120.
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Article
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