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Full Description
This handbook explores and critically evaluates key debates and controversies in the emerging field of Dark Events. It brings together leading specialists from a range of disciplinary backgrounds and geographical regions, to provide state-of-the-art theoretical reflection and empirical research on celebrations, heritage, and customs of death (events) and the macabre.
Divided into 10 parts, the book explores: traditions of dark festivals and events; the display of the dead; commemoration and authenticity within the context of dark events; dark events from the past; dark events in popular culture, controversial dark events; grief and memory; managing dark event experiences; decolonisation and equality for the dead; and dark event futures. This significant volume offers the reader a comprehensive synthesis of this emerging field, conveying the latest thinking and research. The text is international in focus, encouraging dialogue across disciplinary boundaries and areas of study, providing an invaluable resource for all those with an interest in Dark Events.
This is essential reading for students, researchers and academics of Dark Events, as well as those of related studies such as Tourism, Cultural Studies, Leisure, Geography, Sociology, Death Studies, and Museums.
Contents
PART I Cultural celebrations, traditions and honouring the dead in dark events
1.A play to banish the darkness: The domestication of death in Bulgarian folk traditions
2.Sacred shadowed pathways: Kūkai and the Shikoku Pilgrimage
3.Rituals of remembrance: Exploring mortuary and mourning rites among the Akan of Ghana
4.Nigeria Indigenous community and befitting burial for the deceased going-to-the-spirit land
5.Sacred sustenance: Culinary death rituals and mourning events among Assamese Hindus and Christian Nagas
PART II Interpretation, representation and display of the dead for dark events
6.Commemorating the deceased through the Hungry Ghosts Festival in Hong Kong
7.Representing Samhain: Symbols, semiotics and Halloween
8.Fact or Fiction: Walpurgis Night and the commemoration of the victims of Germany's witch trials
9.Italy's martyrs for peace: Representing suffering and patriotic sacrifice after the Nasiriyah Massacre of 2003
PART III Negotiating commemoration, commodification and authenticity in dark events
10.Re-enacting the Gulag: Authenticity and commemoration of the Soviet penal heritage in Kazakhstan
11.Dark commemorative events and selective amnesia in Cambodia
12.Death, ritual, and deification: Examining the commemorative procession of Kerala's iconic politician, Oommen Chandy
13.Ritual returns: Commemoration, commodification and the evolution of UK Halloween Festivals
PART IV Historical dark events and reflecting on the past
14.'More like the first exhibition at a playhouse, than the solemnity of a funeral': Spectating urban funeral events in late-eighteenth century London
15.Seeing justice done: A day at the Tyburn Fair in the long eighteenth century
16.At the dark edge of life and death: Sin-eating rituals in Britain (1640-1900)
17.Shadows of the departed: Post-mortem photography and mourning rituals in Victorian society
18.Immortalising the premature death: Commemorating talented daughters in Ming-Qing China (16th to early 20th centuries)
19.Honour and sacrifice: The socio-cultural dynamics of Jauhar and co-cremation in medieval South Asian traditions
V Dark events in popular culture and media
20.Manifesting ghosts and mimicking ghost hunters: Media and the rise of ghost hunting events
21.Heroism to horror: The reception and transformation of the 'blood eagle' in popular culture
22.If they come, we must build it: Popular culture, tradition and the Hollywoodization of Día de Muertos in Mexico City
23.Celebration, cultural appropriation, or something else? La Catrina, Barbie dolls, and Day of the Dead
24.La Santa Compaña: A demonstration of the literary and ritualistic richness surrounding death in Galician folklore
PART VI Culture, controversy and dark events
25.Navigating culture, religion and controversy: The Penitensya rituals in the Philippines as a dark event
26.Death as a celebration of spiritual liberation: The controversial pathways of Aghorī Sādhus in India
27.Multivalent organised commemoration of the Great War: Building transcultural memory with (embedded) fissures
28.Dark events and media controversies: Remembrance Sunday in the United Kingdom
PART VII Dealing with grief and memory at and through dark events
29.The Dust Parlour: Speaking to the dead
30.Death at play: Celebration and memorialisation of motorsport's dead
31.Eternal troupers: Circus death memorialization and community identity
32.Managing death rites and mourning rituals in the modern era: The evolution of Brazilian funeral rites
PART VIII Managing dark event experiences
33.Managing collective memory through funeral events: an experience design perspective
34.Cultivating a death network through dark academic and pedagogical events
35.Managing Black Metal Festivals
36.Managing event spaces and visitor experiences: Entering liminal worlds at the Whitby Goth Weekend and Dublin's Bram Stoker Festival
37.Managing subcultural capital dynamics for dark events: The case of the Moonlight Goth Music Festival (Italy, 2009-2011)
PART IX Legacy, decolonisation and equality for the dead within dark events
38.Murder mystery and mayhem: Digging up the human stories lurking in 19th century cemeteries
39.Considering the legacy of cultural genocide: Commemorating the colonial expulsion of the Garifuna from their Caribbean homeland
40.Glocal perspectives on the dark heritage of Indigenous reconciliation events
PART X Dark event futures
41.Royal funerals as dark events: Organisational and emotional challenges
42.Tea & hammers: New weapons in the battle with death anxiety
43.Glacier funerals as dark events of the Anthropocene
44.Bringing out the dead: Body Worlds exhibits as touchstones for reflection
45.Dark events and remaking our lifeworld: An afterword