Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 35

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2009, Side 35
ICELANDIC VlKING AGE GRAVES: LaCK IN MATERIAL - LACK OF INTERPRETATION? burial we do not usually see the dead, or even anything that reminds us of them, which admittedly affects our experience of the whole ceremony. If the different constituents of a Viking Age grave and their physical proximity to one another were visible during the funeral, it would have created a (new) context of visible relations between them in the eyes of the observers, whether or not such relations existed or were known earlier. As argued by Howard Williams (2005, 256-257) the grave collective, composed by the body, animals and artifacts, formed a “symbolic text” whose reading was an important part of the ritual performance, as well as the construction of social memory. However, the whole dimension of the relationships displayed would not have been available to everyone present. Conditioned by the personal knowledge and life histories of the participants, as well as the objects exhibited, the range of relations evoked was almost infínite, and at the same time involved a certain degree of secrecy. It was as impossible for those participating as it is to us to identify the whole scope of identities and relations entangled, while the material actually at hand does give us reason to infer. What all funerals have in common is that they are driven by the death of a person and gathered around his or her material remains. In a modern Westem perspective the dead body is generally regarded as inert, vulnerable and defence- less matter. Deprived of the mind/self that once occupied and animated it the corpse is thought of as a numb and empty shell incapable of action (Hallam and Hockey 2001, 133). However as the “object” around which the collective practice circulates, the physical presence of the dead body may be argued to affect those burying, not only emotionally but by tying them together, temporarily at least, in an actor-network (cf. e.g. Latour 1999) and insist on that the action is ful- filled. As pointed out by Hallam and Hockey (2001, 109) the dead body may thus be conceived of as a “boundary being”. It is simultaneously the material residue of life and the physical indicator of death. This comes close to what Michel Serres (1987) and Bruno Latour (1993, 51ff.) would call a “quasi-object” - an indefínable hybrid in between the dimen- sions of life and death, mind and matter, culture and nature. Through its ambigu- ous status, the physical remains of a deceased person, the corpse, can be con- sidered as an archetype of a biographical or memory object as it stands “...not only as a material reminder of the embod- ied, living person, but as a medium through which the dead might communi- cate directly with the living” (Hallam and Hockey 2001, 134). Howard Williams (2004) has criti- cized how, despite the emphasis on agen- cy, recent archaeological research on burial and death rituals have tended to be “mourner-centred”, and thus failed to recognize the centrality of the dead body in this social and mnemonic act. However, as argued by Williams and others (see e.g. Fowler 2001) societies may have dif- ferent conceptions of death and its affect on the body and personhood. Thus, through the transition of death (Hertz 1960 cited in Williams 2004) the body and identity may, in some contexts, con- tinue to be closely entangled, and the “corporeal presence” of the dead person can thus allow it to affect the living, their experience and the act of burial. Therefore, although the dead do not 33

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