Description
This unique volume examines death from a socio-cultural events perspective. Drawing on the empirical and conceptual work produced by an international body of researchers, it is the first publication to look at death, dying, memorialization, and their mediation, from an events orientation.
By placing the contribution of these scholars together, this book provides a unique opportunity to instigate an international, critical discussion, around the connectivities associated with death and events. Chapters consider connections to death and events on many levels, including individual, local, communally based, construals of the event landscape; the relationship between death and events into larger socio-cultural frames of reference. Chapteres also consider how death and events are manifest through diverse platforms of mediation, with a discussion of the media presentation of end of life events, and the articulation of death online. Case studies from a wide-ranging selection of countries, from Moscow to Bangladesh to Cambodia, are examined throughout.
This will be of great interest to upper-level students and researchers in event studies as well as a variety of other disciplines such as sociology and cultural studies.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
Ian R Lamond
Ruth Dowson
2. Funerals as a social process. Rituals and symbols in rural and urban funerals.
Irina Zamfirache
3. Dying with dignity: Perception of good death among the Santals of Bangladesh.
Shaikh Mohammad Kais
4. Memorial space of the necropolis: the case of Novodevichy cemetery.
Maria Kucheryavaya
5. Death, trauma, and the ‘event’.
Arnar Árnason
Sigurjón Baldur Hafsteinsson
6. Ritualized death in Eastern and Islamic culture: "Taste of Cherry".
Mikail Boz
Rifat Becerikli
7. Burdened with the memories of death: An autoethnographic account of the Real and the Imagined deaths.
Khyati Tripathi
8. Living in ‘Limbo’: Death in everyday Sundarbans.
Prama Mukhopadhyay
9. Reframing grief in Colombian armed conflict: Performativities of the photographic image in processes of civil resistance in the Magdalena medio zone (Cimitarra Valley).
Carolina Sourdis
Andrés Pedraza
10. The role of cultural institutions in navigating transnational social spaces of cosmopolitan memory: A reading of the TuolSleng Genocide Museum.
Laura SuYin Hallensleben
11. Remember your brothers. Memory and inspiration in the video-testaments of the Islamic State.
Giuseppe Previtali
12. The assisted dying movement: How media platforms influence our response to events that challenge the boundaries of contemporary social control.
Rhona Winnington
13. Conclusion
Ruth Dowson



