Empires of the Dead, Christopher Heaney
Empires of the Dead, Christopher Heaney
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Empires of the Dead
Inca Mummies and the Peruvian Ancestors of American Anthropology

Author: Christopher Heaney

Narrator: Christian Barillas

Unabridged: 13 hr 29 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 10/24/2023


Synopsis

When the Smithsonian’s Hall of Physical Anthropology opened in 1965 it featured 160 Andean skulls affixed to a wall to visualize how the world’s human population had exploded since the birth of Christ. Through a history of Inca mummies, a preHispanic surgery called trepanation, and Andean crania like these, Empires of the Dead explains how “ancient Peruvians” became the single largest population in the Smithsonian and many other museums in Peru, the Americas, and beyond.

In 1532, when Spain invaded the Inca empire, Europeans learned that Inca and Andean peoples made their ancestors sacred by preserving them with the world’s oldest practices of artificial mummification. To extinguish their power, the Spaniards collected these ancestors as specimens of conquest, science, nature, and race. Yet colonial Andean communities also found ways to keep the dead alive, making “Inca mummies” a symbol of resistance that Spanish American patriots used to introduce Peruvian Independence and science to the world.

Inspired, nineteenth-century US anthropologists disinterred and collected Andean mummies and skulls to question the antiquity and civilization of the American “race” in publications, world’s fairs, and US museums. Peruvian scholars then used those mummies and skulls to transform anthropology itself, curating these “scientific ancestors” as evidence of pre-Hispanic superiority in healing.

Bringing together the history of science, race, and museums’ possession of Indigenous remains, from the sixteenth century to the twentieth, Empires of the Dead illuminates how South American ancestors became coveted mummies, skulls, and specimens of knowledge and nationhood. In doing so it reveals how Peruvian and Andean peoples have learned from their dead, seeking the recovery of looted heritage in the centuries before North American museums began their own work of decolonization.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Maura on April 22, 2024

Museums around the world face a reckoning: how should they deal with their collections of human remains? Largely amassed by archeologists and anthropologists in the 19th and 20th centuries, these remains now speak to an array of practices no longer considered either scientific or ethical: grave-robb......more

Goodreads review by Nate on August 21, 2023

Vivid characters and their worldviews clash in “Empires of the Dead,” Christopher Heaney’s epic history of Peru and its foundational place in modern anthropology. In the 1500s Atahualpa, the last ruler of the Inca Empire, faced Pizarro, the conquistador who in Heaney’s telling had no great victory.......more

Goodreads review by Matt on January 02, 2025

Quite an accomplishment ... incredible research and thoughtful argumentation, accomplished with a great deal of grace. The author is an old friend, and I'm very glad I read this -- it was definitely more academic than most of what I read, and I lacked a great deal of the underlying knowledge about a......more

Goodreads review by Algirdas on February 19, 2024

Listened as an audiobook - might be better as a reading, rather than listening, experience (the narration was fine, but it is history/information dense sometimes). Parts/chapters about how Peruvian/Inca research developed american anthropology (and all the racism that brought in) are of particular i......more

Goodreads review by Alejandro on April 16, 2024

Fascinating history on Peruvian archeology and more.........more