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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Catriona J. McKenzie , Lorna Tilley , Jennifer E. Mack , Laura H. EvisPublisher: Springer Nature Switzerland AG Imprint: Springer Nature Switzerland AG ISBN: 9783032046918ISBN 10: 3032046912 Pages: 273 Publication Date: 03 January 2026 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsChapter 1. Introduction (McKenzie).- Part 1. Using Past Experience to Inform Modern Behaviour and Health.- Chapter 2. Continuing Bonds: Using (Bio)Archaeology for Bereavement, Grief, and Wellbeing (Sutton-Butler et al).- Chapter 3. Bioarchaeology of Care Outreach: How Lessons from the Past May Help Improve the Present (Sáez).- Chapter 4. One Paleopathology: Raising Awareness and Advancing Knowledge (Buikstra et al).- Chapter 5. Using Bioarchaeological Data to Inform Diagnostic Criteria for Acquired Syphilis in Clinical Care and Public Health through Translational Science (Zuckerman et al).- Part 2. Developing Community-Led Research.- Chapter 6. Marching Forward Together: Towards a Decolonized, Collaborative Bioarchaeology in California (Tapia and Arellano).- Chapter 7. The Care Connection: Using Co-Production to Link Archaeology and Unpaid Carers (McKenzie et al).- Chapter 8. Child of A’ua’u, Returning Home: A Community-Led Repatriation Project to Mangaia, Cook Islands (King et al).- Part 3. Bioarchaeology and the Arts.- Chapter 9. Acting Queerly: Creative Collaboration in Applied Bioarchaeology (Charles and McDaniel). Chapter 10. “Interesting Characters Find Graves in the Potter’s Field”: The Value of Fictive Storytelling in Historical Bioarchaeology (Drew).- Chapter 11. Buried Threads: Weaving Narratives Through Art and Bioarchaeology at the Asylum Hill Cemetery Mack et al).- Part 4. A Way Forward.- Chapter 12. A Personal Reflection: We have come this far—but where do we go from here? (Tilley).ReviewsAuthor InformationCatriona J. McKenzie is Associate Professor at the University of Exeter, UK. She has been developing the field of Applied Bioarchaeology through projects such as Literary Archaeology: Exploring the Lived Environment of the Slave (AHRC funded), and Care, the Great Human Tradition: A Multidisciplinary Collaborative Exploration of Family Care Across Time and Culture (Wellcome Trust funded). Previous books include the co-edited volume Writing Remains: New Intersections of Archaeology, Literature and Science; the co-authored book Life and Death in Medieval Gaelic Ireland: The Skeletons from Ballyhanna, Co. Donegal and a co-edited volume The Science of a Lost Medieval Gaelic Cemetery: The Ballyhanna Research Project. Lorna Tilley is an independent researcher living in Australia. Her research focuses on lived experiences of disability and care in the past, and the methodology she developed is described in Theory and Practice in the Bioarchaeology of Care (the first volume in the Bioarchaeology and Social Theory series). She has since co-edited a volume on advances in the bioarchaeology of care approach—New Developments in the Bioarchaeology of Care: Further Case Studies and Extended Theory and two Special Issues in the International Journal of Paleopathology on Mummy Studies and the Bioarchaeology of Care and Disability and Care in Western Europe during Medieval Times: A Bioarchaeological Perspective. Jennifer E. Mack is the Lead Bioarchaeologist of the Asylum Hill Project at the University of Mississippi Medical Center, USA. Her research focuses on mortuary variation and evidence of health and disease in historic-period cemeteries, particularly those associated with public institutions. She co-authored Dubuque’s Forgotten Cemetery: Excavating a Nineteenth-century Burial Ground in a Twenty-first-century City, which won the Society for Historical Archaeology’s James Deetz book award in 2017. Laura H. Evis is Senior Lecturer in Forensic Archaeology and Anthropology at the University of Exeter, UK. She develops and adapts bioarchaeological techniques to improve data capture in archaeological investigations and forensic casework. A core component of her work is fostering strong collaborative relationships with emergency services and heritage organizations, facilitating knowledge exchange and the translation of her research into professional practice. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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