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AY1505: DEATH! (2021-2022)

Last modified: 31 May 2022 13:05


Course Overview

Explore death in human society from the earliest formal burials to diverse modern practices world wide.   This course incorporates archaeological studies of skeletons and mortuary sites as well as legal, anthropological and forensic perspectives. You will gain a complex understanding of one of the universal humans experiences and how those still living interact with death and the dead.

Course Details

Study Type Undergraduate Level 1
Term Second Term Credit Points 15 credits (7.5 ECTS credits)
Campus Aberdeen Sustained Study No
Co-ordinators
  • Dr Rebecca Crozier

What courses & programmes must have been taken before this course?

  • Either Programme Level 1 or Programme Level 2
  • Any Undergraduate Programme (Studied)

What other courses must be taken with this course?

None.

What courses cannot be taken with this course?

None.

Are there a limited number of places available?

No

Course Description

Birth and death are universal human experiences. However, there are as many ways human societies experience death as there are ways to die. Archaeology has long focused on the discovery and interpretation of human remains and burials as a means of understanding and reconstructing past societies and is the discipline best situated to guide students through the longterm history of the diverse processes and human experiences of death, its study, and its impact on the living. Though this course offers a global perspective made up of different temporal and regional situations, we begin by considering the surprisingly varied mortuary practices of recent ‘Western’ societies and contemporary constructions of death, dying and mortuary practice.  

 

Spanning the sciences and humanities, through this course you will learn how we study the dead and the methods we use to reconstruct how people in the past lived and died. We will explore familiar and unfamiliar cultural attitudes to death and what they can tell us about the human condition. Built around a series of distinctive topical cases we will study human relations with death from the archaeological evidence for the first deliberate burials to the elaborate burial systems of later prehistory to the social and legal contexts of burial today. Topics studied will also include human skeletal analysis in archaeology and forensic science, as well as the individual biographical information that can come from analysis of human remains. Close consideration will be given to taphonomy, or the physical process of burial and decay, of human remains in various burial conditions as well as to the physical and social construction of cemeteries and other mortuary spaces.


Contact Teaching Time

Information on contact teaching time is available from the course guide.

Teaching Breakdown

More Information about Week Numbers


Details, including assessments, may be subject to change until 30 August 2024 for 1st term courses and 20 December 2024 for 2nd term courses.

Summative Assessments

Lab Report: Individual

Assessment Type Summative Weighting 34
Assessment Weeks Feedback Weeks

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Learning Outcomes
Knowledge LevelThinking SkillOutcome
Sorry, we don't have this information available just now. Please check the course guide on MyAberdeen or with the Course Coordinator

Reflective Report

Assessment Type Summative Weighting 33
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Learning Outcomes
Knowledge LevelThinking SkillOutcome
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Project Report/Dissertation

Assessment Type Summative Weighting 33
Assessment Weeks Feedback Weeks

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Learning Outcomes
Knowledge LevelThinking SkillOutcome
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Formative Assessment

There are no assessments for this course.

Course Learning Outcomes

Knowledge LevelThinking SkillOutcome
ProceduralApplyPractice at concise short report and essay writing through creation of portfolio elements.
ConceptualRememberWide ranging knowledge of human diverse mortuary practice
ConceptualRememberIntroduction to the practice of Osteoarchaeology and Forensic science
ConceptualUnderstandExperience the intersection of science, social science and the humanities.

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