“A major, ethnographically focused, empirically based, and theoretically cutting edge contribution to the field of critical heritage studies that warrants global readership.”—Christian Isendahl, University of Gothenburg“An illuminating and much-needed contribution to the discussion of the decolonization of cultural studies, Living Ruins shows, in all its intricacies, the basic ambivalence of Native attitudes toward vestiges of the past, oscillating between fascination and fear, patrimonial pride and metaphysical discomfort."—Philippe Descola, Collège de France, author of Beyond Nature and Culture "This pathbreaking collection shows how vestiges of the past become sites of ontological encounter where contrasting understandings of time, materiality and "life" are played out. Living Ruins interrogates these issues with ethnographic depth, theoretical sophistication and respect."—Catherine Allen, The George Washington University