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Reburial and Commemoration

2017
“Reburial and Commemoration” follows the trajectory of human remains from mass graves to their reburial place in municipal cemeteries. In this chapter, Araguete-Toribio explores the politics around the identification and commemoration of human remains, examining how the process of reburial is enmeshed with the diverse desires and aspirations.
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Some Scholars' Views on Reburial

American Antiquity, 1992
[T]here is something inherently distasteful and unseemly in secreting either the fruits or seeds of scientific endeavors. Judge Bruce S. Jenkins (quoted in Palca 1991:884) Destruction of archaeological collections through the demands for reburial presents a serious conflict between religion and science.
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The reburial issue in Britain

Antiquity, 2009
The dead are back. Like a horde of irritating poltergeists the human remains of the ancients have returned to harass us in the form of the reburial issue; perennial source of postcolonial guilt and undergraduate seminar material. Only this time there is an unusual twist: the remains in question are British.
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The Background To Polyneices' Disinterment and Reburial

Greece and Rome, 1983
Why should Antigone in Sophocles' play want to return to Polyneices' body, after apparently successfully burying it, if we may judge from the guard's report to Creon at lines 245ff.? Ever since it was first raised by Jebb in his note onAntigone429, this question has given scholars almost as much trouble as the original burial gave Antigone herself ...
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Exhumation, Display, Reburial

Chapter 5 expands discussion of Rwanda’s genocide heritage from the conservation of genocide sites and victims to include related processes of exhumation and ceremonies for reburial and commemoration. The chapter draws primarily from photographs, taken in series, of the work to recover genocide victims from mass graves, prepare their remains for ...
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A Twenty-first Dynasty private reburial at Thebes

The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, 1991
The publication of a hieratic label in Durham, which deals with the early Twenty-first Dynasty reburial of a private person and mentions an embalmer named Neferrenpet, who appears to have been involved with a number of the reburial commissions of the period.
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Jewish Ossuaries: Reburial and Rebirth

Journal of Biblical Literature, 1974
James F. Strange, Eric M. Meyers
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