The Analysis of Burned Human Remains 2015
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-12-800451-7.00022-x
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The Use of Ethnographic Information in Cremation Studies

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…In this regard ethnohistorical studies of cremation on the American NorthWest coast (Kan, 1989) and the diversity of cremation rituals in India outside of the high-caste Brahmin rites usually studied (Århem, 1989;ManiBabu, 1994;Vitebsky, 1993) can be cited. Equally, there are informative variations in cremation rites in southeast Asia to compliment the repeated study of Balinese cremation (Hudson, 1966;Ward and Tayles, 2015). To date, these studies have had restricted use in reconstructing formal procedures (McKinley, 1994), but there remain many other levels by which analogies might be of relevance to the study of the social significance, the symbolism and the contexts of cremation in past societies.…”
Section: Sources For Analogymentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In this regard ethnohistorical studies of cremation on the American NorthWest coast (Kan, 1989) and the diversity of cremation rituals in India outside of the high-caste Brahmin rites usually studied (Århem, 1989;ManiBabu, 1994;Vitebsky, 1993) can be cited. Equally, there are informative variations in cremation rites in southeast Asia to compliment the repeated study of Balinese cremation (Hudson, 1966;Ward and Tayles, 2015). To date, these studies have had restricted use in reconstructing formal procedures (McKinley, 1994), but there remain many other levels by which analogies might be of relevance to the study of the social significance, the symbolism and the contexts of cremation in past societies.…”
Section: Sources For Analogymentioning
confidence: 96%