body
Body as active object: The role of body in constituting masculine identity in Sasanian high status, based on Sasanian rock relief
Maryam Dezhamkhooy (University of Tehran, Iran)
The Death of Burial: rethinking ‘body’ in Iron Age southern England
Pip Stone (University of Exeter,UK) and Mike Lally (Archaeological Solutions, UK)
Removing the Dead in Prepalatial Crete: A Case for Endocannibalism
Kathryn Soar (University of Nottingham, UK)
Persons, things, or other kinds of being: explorations in the "archaeology of death"
John Robb (University of Cambridge, UK)
Inhumation and Cremation: can we extract beliefs from prehistoric burial practices?
Katharina Rebay-Salisbury (University of Cambridge, UK)
Embodied Images: Destruction and Response in Late Antique Egypt
Troels Myrup Kristensen (University of Aarhus, Denmark)
The body, photography and commemorative monuments in post-war Northern France
Duncan Sayer (University of Bath, UK)
The effect of the first world war on British commemorative behaviour is well
reported in the literature, the volume of loss and the common absence of a
bodies empowered the previously marginal practice of cremation and sees the
widespread growth in memorials dedicated to the regimental, town or regional
missing located in public and civic spaces. However, this transformation in
Painting and Archaeological Experience: the figure remains
Gillian Robertson (Winchester School of Art, UK)
How can a painting act as a metaphor [1] for archaeology? What happens to the archaeological object when it meets with the two-dimensional surface employed by the painter? What happens to the painting?
Identity within intentionality: use of the body to relate the social brain to the archaeological record
James Cole (University of Southampton)