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Three stories and a funeral: multiple narrative fictions exploring disAbility osteobiography in Roman Dorset

Three stories and a funeral: multiple narrative fictions exploring disAbility osteobiography in Roman Dorset
Three stories and a funeral: multiple narrative fictions exploring disAbility osteobiography in Roman Dorset
Paleopathological study uses complex terminology, including medical jargon, to describe and understand a disease process and/or diseased individual. Such terminology might not be comprehensible and accessible to non-bioarchaeologists, including similarly affected individuals. This is especially the case when considering the interplay of disease with disability. How is disability defined, recognized and understood in past peoples? Can this be communicated using non-traditional mechanisms? Developing other or non-standard mechanisms for communication of bioarchaeological and paleopathological studies is vital for public understanding of and engagement with the discipline. This project studied a small cemetery assemblage from Roman Alington Avenue in Dorset. Osteobiographies were developed for those buried within the cemetery, and then, following grounding in disability theory and using a feminist standpoint theory approach, three interweaving fictive narratives were written about three specific individuals. One of these three was an individual previously diagnosed as having Langer type mesomelic dwarfism (Rogers 2002:154-157). In writing the narratives, the implications of the constructions of possible bodily impairment and socially constructed views of disability were considered. Through this writing, focusing on bodily materiality and object-relations, the constructive effects of the interactions between the three people themselves and between them and their physical and social environments became clear regarding Roman views of disability, thereby producing new knowledge and understanding. This paper explores the potential of integrated narrative fiction to enable communication of the implications of putative disability in one past group.
disability, osteobiography, Roman Britain
2472-8349
Evelyn-Wright, Stephanie
d817a798-bc54-47b1-bb44-0a355fb6dbfa
Zakrzewski, Sonia
d80afd94-feff-4fe8-96e9-f3db79bba99d
Evelyn-Wright, Stephanie
d817a798-bc54-47b1-bb44-0a355fb6dbfa
Zakrzewski, Sonia
d80afd94-feff-4fe8-96e9-f3db79bba99d

Evelyn-Wright, Stephanie and Zakrzewski, Sonia (2025) Three stories and a funeral: multiple narrative fictions exploring disAbility osteobiography in Roman Dorset. Bioarchaeology International. (doi:10.5744/bi.2024.0013).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Paleopathological study uses complex terminology, including medical jargon, to describe and understand a disease process and/or diseased individual. Such terminology might not be comprehensible and accessible to non-bioarchaeologists, including similarly affected individuals. This is especially the case when considering the interplay of disease with disability. How is disability defined, recognized and understood in past peoples? Can this be communicated using non-traditional mechanisms? Developing other or non-standard mechanisms for communication of bioarchaeological and paleopathological studies is vital for public understanding of and engagement with the discipline. This project studied a small cemetery assemblage from Roman Alington Avenue in Dorset. Osteobiographies were developed for those buried within the cemetery, and then, following grounding in disability theory and using a feminist standpoint theory approach, three interweaving fictive narratives were written about three specific individuals. One of these three was an individual previously diagnosed as having Langer type mesomelic dwarfism (Rogers 2002:154-157). In writing the narratives, the implications of the constructions of possible bodily impairment and socially constructed views of disability were considered. Through this writing, focusing on bodily materiality and object-relations, the constructive effects of the interactions between the three people themselves and between them and their physical and social environments became clear regarding Roman views of disability, thereby producing new knowledge and understanding. This paper explores the potential of integrated narrative fiction to enable communication of the implications of putative disability in one past group.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 March 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 September 2025
Keywords: disability, osteobiography, Roman Britain

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 500253
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/500253
ISSN: 2472-8349
PURE UUID: 0c68a104-1054-4fa4-8b54-a27921947d54
ORCID for Sonia Zakrzewski: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1796-065X

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Date deposited: 23 Apr 2025 16:44
Last modified: 17 Sep 2025 04:01

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Author: Stephanie Evelyn-Wright

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