Not Just Dead Meat: An Evolutionary Account of Corpse Treatment in Mortuary Rituals

Author:

White Claire12,Marin Maya3,Fessler Daniel M.T.4

Affiliation:

1. *Corresponding author, e-mail: claire.white@csun.edu

2. Department of Religious Studies, California State UniversityNorthridge, 236 Santa Susana Hall, 18111 Nordhoff Street, ca 91330-8316USA

3. Institute of Cognition and Culture, Queen’s University2–4 Fitzwilliam Street, Belfast BT7 1NNUK

4. Center for Behavior, Evolution, and Culture, Department of Anthropology, UCLA375 Portola Plaza, 341 Haines Hall, Box 951553, Los Angeles, ca 90095-1553USA

Abstract

Comparing mortuary rituals across 57 representative cultures extracted from the Human Relations Area Files, this paper demonstrates that kin of the deceased engage in behaviours to prepare the deceased for disposal that entail close and often prolonged contact with the contaminating corpse. At first glance, such practices are costly and lack obvious payoffs. Building on prior functionalist approaches, we present an explanation of corpse treatment that takes account of the unique adaptive challenges entailed by the death of a loved one. We propose that intimate contact with the corpse provides the bereaved with extensive veridical cues of death, thereby facilitating acceleration of a grieving process that serves to recategorize the deceased as no longer a relationship partner, opening the door to relationship replacement and a return to social functioning. The benefits of exposure to such cues are tempered by the costs of exposure to cues of disease risk, a balance that in part explains the relative rarity of highly invasive mortuary practices that exacerbate the latter factor. We conclude by discussing implications of our model for contemporary mortuary practices in the developed world.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Cultural Studies,Social Psychology

Reference71 articles.

1. Grief from an evolutionary perspective;Archer,2001

2. Bereavement following death of a pet;Archer;British Journal of Psychology,1994

3. The cultural morphospace of ritual form: Examining modes of religiosity cross-culturally;Atkinson;Evolution and Human Behavior,2011

4. Children’s understanding of death as the cessation of agency: A test using sleep versus death;Barrett;International Journal of Cognitive Psychology,2005

5. Mortuary practices: Their study and their potential;Binford;Memoirs of the Society for American Archaeology,1971

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