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The Buried Soul: How Humans Invented Death by Timothy Taylor
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The Buried Soul: How Humans Invented Death

by Timothy Taylor

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Fascinating book. Subjects range from bog bodies to cannibalism to neolithic accidental burials to ship burials. Taylor is an archaeologist and a lot of his theories are backed up by good archaeological evidence (or lack thereof). But he also incorporates some anecdotal stories from his life, which really shows how our perception of death and burial has changed over the millennia. (I also liked that I have a few books in his bibliography. It makes me feel smart!) Muchly recommended. ( )
  PirateJenny | Oct 25, 2005 |
Not to be read while eating.... Taylor again has written an entertaining book that does its best to blow comforting, comfortable beliefs about humanity's past right out of the water. This is, in essence, a chronicle of cannibalism. I remember being told as a student that cannibalism is an insult one group gives to another - that examples of real cannibalism had not been found.
Taylor refutes that, and the basis for that, in the first few pages, and discusses clearly and cogently issues such as cannibalism and muti.
  tole_lege | Oct 22, 2005 |
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Timothy Taylor (archaeologist)

Book description

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0807046671, Paperback)

The Buried Soul is a worldwide exploration of the rites and rituals of death. Timothy Taylor's search spans all of human history and interweaves the author's own experience of bewildering deaths. By combining cutting-edge science, personal insight, and scholarship, The Buried Soul offers a radical voyage into sepulchral worlds.

"The Buried Soul, by British archeologist Timothy Taylor, is an extraordinary immersion experience . . . I had always supposed that archeology was as dry as the dust and bones it traffics in, as pedestrian as the catalogs it compiles. On the contrary, when expounded by a masterly storyteller like Taylor, it resembles psychoanalysis at its best...I haven't space to illustrate how ingeniously Taylor assembles his interpretations, patiently working out the barely intelligible motives and beliefs of the creatures who became us . . . Wherever else you travel, you should consider a trip into 'deep time' with The Buried Soul."
—George Scialabba, Boston Globe

"Taylor makes sense of the ghastly and the seemingly insensible—African muti killings, human sacrifice, vampires, and triple-killed bog bodies. Archaeology was never so entertaining, and entertainment never so edifying. Taylor rescues cannibalism from its P.C. detention hall. He hauls ghosts off the Halloween novelty racks and reflects on their ancient status as disembodied souls: dangerous, utterly terrifying entities that had to be trapped, served, tricked, placated. There is not a trite thought or lazy idea in this book. Taylor is blazingly smart and deeply human."
—Mary Roach, author of Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers

"Learned and impassioned."
—Adam Kirsch, New York Sun

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:22 -0400)

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