Williams, Howard2019-03-132019-03-132018-09-01Williams, H. (2019). Dead Relevant: Introducing The Public Archaeology of Death. In H. Williams, B. Wills-Eve & J. Osborne (Eds.), The Public Archaeology of Death (pp. 1–16). Sheffield: Equinox.9781781795934http://hdl.handle.net/10034/621989Introducing the ten chapters of the book which each explore different dimensions of the public archaeology of death, this introduction asks: why and how are the archaeologically derived traces of human remains and mortuary monuments “dead relevant”? In other words, how has mortuary archaeology, from catacombs to cremated remains, come to enthral and gain significance in con- temporary society, and how does it continue to do so? Considering the diversity of archaeological field investigation, curation and display in museums, contestation and dialogues between archae- ologists, stakeholders and descendent communities, and the publications and popular receptions of the archaeological dead in the arts, literature and media, as well as via ancient monuments and historic landscapes, the public archaeology of death is a vibrant field of future research.enhttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/DeathFunerary ArcheologyMortuary ArchaeologyPublic Archaeology of DeathPublic Mortuary ArchaeologyDead Relevant: Introducing The Public Archaeology of DeathBook chapter