@article{948cb5d690544dbd9b6bce1187db8a83,
title = "Skull Walls: The Peruvian Dead and the Remains of Entanglement",
author = "Christopher Heaney",
note = "Funding Information: This essay{\textquoteright}s research and writing were supported by a Smithsonian Predoctoral Fellowship, the Consortium for History of Science, Technology, and Medicine, a Fulbright-Hays Graduate Fellowship, and the McNeil Center for Early American Studies Barra Postdoctoral Fellowship. Its road to publication was long and reflective, and it received crucial feedback at turns along the way: at the McNeil Center for Early American Studies Friday Seminar, the Latin American & Latino Studies Program Seminar Series at the University of Pennsylvania, the inaugural meeting of the Asociaci{\'o}n Peruana de Historia y Estudios Sociales de la Ciencia, la Tecnolog{\'i}a y la Salud, the 2018 Omohundro Institute Conference, the Social Sciences Research Council Fields of Inquiry Graduate Student Conference, and from the History and Philosophy of Science Working Group at UT Austin. I thank those groups{\textquoteright} participants for their thoughtful comments and suggestions, as well as those readers of versions of this essay who charged me with making it better: especially, Erika Bsumek, Jorge Ca{\~n}izares Esguerra, Hannah Carney, Mackenzie Cooley, R. Alan Covey, Ann Fabian, Seth Garfield, Paul Wolff Mitchell, Lyra Monteiro, Dan Richter, Jordi Rivera Prince, Julia Rodriguez, Nancy Shoemaker, Christina Snyder, Cameron Strang, Sarah Van Beurden, Matthew Velasco, Adam Warren, Eyal Weinberg, Jeremy Zallen, and two rounds of anonymous reviewers of the AHR. Amy Kohout in particular gave feedback on portions of this essay many times over, for which I am very grateful. Last, I thank the editors of the AHR, whose patience and counsel kept this essay alive.",
year = "2022",
month = sep,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1093/ahr/rhac261",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "127",
pages = "1071--1101",
journal = "American Historical Review",
issn = "0002-8762",
publisher = "Oxford University Press",
number = "3",
}