Publication | Closed Access
Flames of transformation: the role of fire in cremation practices
34
Citations
10
References
2008
Year
Cultural HeritageMaterial WorldsArchaeologyEducationExperimental ArchaeologyBronze AgeFire ProtectionArchaeological RecordPrehistorySensory ArchaeologyCultural HistoryCremation PracticesLanguage StudiesBurial PracticesArchaeological EvidenceMaterial CultureHistorical ArchaeologyFire SafetyBurn ManagementModern DenmarkCultureFire ResearchFire InvestigationCulture ChangeAnthropologyCultural Anthropology
Abstract This paper explores the transformative power of fire, its fundamental ability to change material worlds and affect our experience of its materiality. The paper examines material transformations related to death as a means of illustrating the powerful property of fire as a materially destructive yet socially generative and creative element. While fire has been widely discussed archaeologically as a technological element, and recently coupled with the social and symbolic powers of pyrotechnology, we focus on the sensuous staging of fire in disposal practices. The paper employs two case studies focusing on cremation burial from Bronze Age (c.1300–1100 bc) and modern Denmark in order to demonstrate widely different sensuous engagements with fire and its experiential significance in a cremation context.
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