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Full Description
Death in today's world is sometimes centre stage and sometimes scarcely visible at all. The emotional mapping of dying, death, funerals, memory, and grief embraces much diversity as personal choice engages with patterns of tradition and increasing commercial options. Old people's homes offer respite while prompting anxiety over being forgotten while on the route to death, older old age is not always seen as a blessing.
Increasing academic and popular interest in mortality witnesses the rise of death studies, drawing from many academic disciplines, as reflected in this book's insightful work of anthropologists, sociologists, historians, theologians and literary scholars. These highlight the ritual and symbolism of funerals, memorials, sex, gender, and queer issues while also capturing key aspects of belief, law, and ethics. Literature, too, is not forgotten.
Traditional and woodland burials, cremation and its ashes, the freezing of the dead, and innovative forms of alkaline hydrolysis of bodies all play their part in contemporary wishes. But other pressured circumstances of migration, pandemics, war, terrorism, and most especially of global warming and climate change affect the energy, chemistry, and land used for the dead: death is now an ecological and environmental challenge. Yet, some long to live long while others seek death when assailed by serious illness, sometimes feeling betrayed by healthcare systems forbidding euthanasia. Many kinds of words against death accompany all these situations, not least as the quiet grief of families and friends touches our identity or even our destiny.
A Cultural History of Death is part of The Cultural Histories Series. Titles are available as hardcover sets for libraries needing just one subject or preferring a tangible reference for their shelves or as part of a fully-searchable digital library. The digital product is available to institutions by annual subscription or on perpetual access via www.bloomsburyculturalhistory.com. Individual volumes for academics and researchers interested in specific historical periods are also available in print or digitally via www.bloomsburycollections.com.
Contents
Introduction
1. Dead and Dying Bodies, Douglas J. Davies, (Durham University, UK)
2. The Sensory Aesthetics of Death, Jonathan Clinch, (Royal Academy of Music, UK)
3. Emotions, Mortality and Vitality, Sibylle Erle, (University of Lincoln, UK)
4. Death's Ritual-Symbolic Performance, Brenda Mathijssen (University of Groningen, the Netherlands) and Claudia Venhorst (Radboud University Nijmegen, the Netherlands)
5. Sites, Power and Politics of Death, Adrian Gregory, (Oxford University, UK)
6. Gender, Age and Identity, Panagiotis Pentaris, (Goldsmiths University of London, UK) and Mattia Petricola, (University of L'Aquila, Italy)
7. Explaining Death: Belief, Law and Ethics, Henry Novello, (Flinders University, Australia)
8. The Undead and Eternal, Douglas J. Davies, (Durham University, UK)
Bibliography
Notes
Index



