Skip to product information
1 of 1

Heyday Books

Grave Matters: The Controversy Over Excavating California's Buried Indigenous Past

Grave Matters: The Controversy Over Excavating California's Buried Indigenous Past

Regular price $22.00
Regular price Sale price $22.00
Sale Sold out
How do we reconcile the sanctity of Indigenous burial grounds with the desire to study them?

Whether by curious Boy Scouts and "backyard archaeologists" or competitive collectors and knowledge-hungry anthropologists, the excavation of Native remains is a practice fraught with injustice and simmering resentments.

Grave Matters is the history of the treatment of Native remains in California and the story of the complicated relationship between researcher and researched. Tony Platt begins his journey with his son's funeral at Big Lagoon, a seaside village in pastoral Humboldt County in Northern California, once O-py weg, a bustling center for the Yurok and the site of a plundered native cemetery. Platt travels the globe in search of the answer to the question: How do we reconcile a place of extraordinary beauty with its horrific past?

Grave Matters centers the Yurok people and the eventual movement to repatriate remains and reclaim ancient rights, but it is also a universal story of coming to terms with the painful legacy of a sorrowful past. This book, originally published in 2011, is updated here with a preface by the author.

Author: Tony Platt
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Heyday Books
Published: 11/12/2021
Pages: 256
Weight: 0.7lbs
Size: 8.90h x 5.90w x 0.70d
ISBN: 9781597145596
2nd Edition
View full details