New Global Bioarchaeology Book

New Global Bioarchaeology Book

Dr. Haagen D. Klaus has co-edited with Dr. Melissa S. Murphy a recently published book, Colonized Bodies, Worlds Transformed: Toward a Global Bioarchaeology of Contact and Colonialism.

European expansion into the New World fundamentally altered indigenous populations. The collision between East and West led to the most recent human adaptive transition that spread around the world. Paradoxically, these are some of the least scientifically understood processes of the human past. Representing a new generation of contact and colonialism studies, this volume expands on the traditional focus on the health of conquered peoples by considering how extraordinary biological and cultural transformations were incorporated into the human body and reflected in behavior, identity, and adaptation.

By examining changes in diet, mortuary practices, and diseases, these globally diverse case studies demonstrate that the effects of conquest reach further than was ever thought before—to both the colonized and the colonizers. People on all sides of colonial contact became entangled in cultural and biological transformations of social identities, foodways, social structures, and gene pools at points of contact and beyond. Contributors to this volume illustrate previously unknown and variable effects of colonialism — reflecting previously unknown histories and human experiences — by analyzing skeletal remains and burial patterns from never-before-studied regions in the North, Central, and South America to the Middle East, Africa, and Europe. The result is the first step toward a new synthesis of archaeology and bioarchaeology.

The book is currently available for preorder on Amazon and the University Press of Florida website (and hopefully anywhere else good books are still sold!), and should be shipping by the end of the month at the very latest. We hope you enjoy.