Affiliation
University of Chester; University of SheffieldPublication Date
2015-11-18
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Over recent decades, the ethics, politics and public engagements of mortuary archaeology have received sustained scrutiny, including how we handle, write about and display the archaeological dead. Yet the burgeoning use of digital media to engage different audiences in the archaeology of death and burial have so far escaped attention. This article explores categories and strategies by which digital media create virtual communities engaging with mortuary archaeology. Considering digital public mortuary archaeology (DPMA) as a distinctive theme linking archaeology, mortality and material culture, we discuss blogs, vlogs and Twitter as case studies to illustrate the variety of strategies by which digital media can promote, educate and engage public audiences with archaeological projects and research relating to death and the dead in the human past. The article then explores a selection of key critical concerns regarding how the digital dead are currently portrayed, identifying the need for further investigation and critical reflection on DPMA’s aims, objectives and aspired outcomes.Citation
Williams, H. & Atkin, A. (2015). Virtually Dead: Digital Public Mortuary Archaeology. Internet Archaeology, 40. http://dx.doi.org/10.11141/ia.40.7.4Publisher
Internet ArchaeologyJournal
Internet ArchaeologyType
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
1363-5387Sponsors
Manchester Metropolitan Universityae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.11141/ia.40.7.4
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