Massacres : bioarchaeology and forensic anthropology approaches /
Massacres : bioarchaeology and forensic anthropology approaches /
edited by Cheryl P. Anderson and Debra L. Martin ; foreword by Clark Larsen.
- Gainesville : University of Florida Press, (c)2018.
- 1 online resource
- Bioarchaeological interpretations of the human past: local, regional, and global perspectives .
Includes bibliographies and index.
Introduction / Rethinking massacres: bioarchaeological and forensic investigation of prehistoric multiple burials in the Tennessee Valley / Forensic perspectives on mass violence in prehistoric California / Only the men will do: a bioarchaeological exploration of gender in an Andean mass death assemblage / Aplications of coded osteological data from the Smithsonian Repatriation Database for the study of violence in the past / Each one the same: performance, demography, and violence at Sacred Ridge / Bones in the village: fragmentary human bones and scattered contexts from the Crow Creek Village / Khmer Rouge massacres: skeletal evidence of violent trauma in Cambodia / Sowing the dead: massacres and the missing in northern Uganda / The extended massacre of migrants: exposure-related deaths in the Arizona Sonoran Desert / Migrant death and identification: theory, science, and socio-politics / Conclusion / Cheryl P. Anderson and Debra L. Martin -- William E. DeVore, Keith P. Jacobi and David H. Dye -- Marin A. Pilloud and Al W. Schwitalla -- J. Marla Toyne -- Ashley E. Kendell -- Anna J. Osterholtz -- P Willey -- Julie M. Fleishman, Sonnara Prak, Vuthy Voeun and Sophearavy Ros -- Tricia Redeker Hepner, Dawnie W. Steadman and Julia R. Hanebrink -- Cate E. Bird -- Krista E. Latham, Alyson O'Daniel and Justin Maiers -- Ryan P. Harrod.
The goal of this edited volume is to present case studies that integrate the evidence from human remains with the broader cultural and historical context through the utilization of social theory to provide a framework for interpretation. This volume highlights case studies of massacres across time and space that stress innovative theoretical models that help make sense of this unique form of violence. The primary focus will be on how massacres are used as a strategy of violence across time and cultural/geopolitical landscapes.
9781683400752
Massacres--History.
Mass murder--History.
Excavations (Archaeology)
Electronic Books.
HV6505 / .M377 2018
Includes bibliographies and index.
Introduction / Rethinking massacres: bioarchaeological and forensic investigation of prehistoric multiple burials in the Tennessee Valley / Forensic perspectives on mass violence in prehistoric California / Only the men will do: a bioarchaeological exploration of gender in an Andean mass death assemblage / Aplications of coded osteological data from the Smithsonian Repatriation Database for the study of violence in the past / Each one the same: performance, demography, and violence at Sacred Ridge / Bones in the village: fragmentary human bones and scattered contexts from the Crow Creek Village / Khmer Rouge massacres: skeletal evidence of violent trauma in Cambodia / Sowing the dead: massacres and the missing in northern Uganda / The extended massacre of migrants: exposure-related deaths in the Arizona Sonoran Desert / Migrant death and identification: theory, science, and socio-politics / Conclusion / Cheryl P. Anderson and Debra L. Martin -- William E. DeVore, Keith P. Jacobi and David H. Dye -- Marin A. Pilloud and Al W. Schwitalla -- J. Marla Toyne -- Ashley E. Kendell -- Anna J. Osterholtz -- P Willey -- Julie M. Fleishman, Sonnara Prak, Vuthy Voeun and Sophearavy Ros -- Tricia Redeker Hepner, Dawnie W. Steadman and Julia R. Hanebrink -- Cate E. Bird -- Krista E. Latham, Alyson O'Daniel and Justin Maiers -- Ryan P. Harrod.
The goal of this edited volume is to present case studies that integrate the evidence from human remains with the broader cultural and historical context through the utilization of social theory to provide a framework for interpretation. This volume highlights case studies of massacres across time and space that stress innovative theoretical models that help make sense of this unique form of violence. The primary focus will be on how massacres are used as a strategy of violence across time and cultural/geopolitical landscapes.
9781683400752
Massacres--History.
Mass murder--History.
Excavations (Archaeology)
Electronic Books.
HV6505 / .M377 2018