Deathscapes : spaces for death, dying, mourning and remembrance
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Bibliographic Information
Deathscapes : spaces for death, dying, mourning and remembrance
Routledge, 2016
- : pbk
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Includes references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Death is at once a universal and everyday, but also an extraordinary experience in the lives of those affected. Death and bereavement are thereby intensified at (and frequently contained within) certain sites and regulated spaces, such as the hospital, the cemetery and the mortuary. However, death also affects and unfolds in many other spaces: the home, public spaces and places of worship, sites of accident, tragedy and violence. Such spaces, or Deathscapes, are intensely private and personal places, while often simultaneously being shared, collective, sites of experience and remembrance; each place mediated through the intersections of emotion, body, belief, culture, society and the state. Bringing together geographers, sociologists, anthropologists, cultural studies academics and historians among others, this book focuses on the relationships between space/place and death/ bereavement in 'western' societies. Addressing three broad themes: the place of death; the place of final disposition; and spaces of remembrance and representation, the chapters reflect a variety of scales ranging from the mapping of bereavement on the individual or in private domestic space, through to sites of accident, battle, burial, cremation and remembrance in public space. The book also examines social and cultural changes in death and bereavement practices, including personalisation and secularisation. Other social trends are addressed by chapters on green and garden burial, negotiating emotion in public/ private space, remembrance of violence and disaster, and virtual space. A meshing of material and 'more-than-representational' approaches consider the nature, culture, economy and politics of Deathscapes - what are in effect some of the most significant places in human society.
Table of Contents
- 1: Introduction
- I: At the Threshold - Living with Death
- 2: 'It's Not Really Like a Hospice' Spaces of Self-help and Community Care for Cancer
- 3: Laying Lazarus to Rest
- II: Spaces of Burial
- 4: Buried Bodies in an East London Cemetery
- 5: From Anti-social Behaviour to X-rated
- 6: Rest in Peace? Burial on Private Land
- 7: From Cabbages to Cadavers
- III: Negotiating Space for Memorialisation in Private and Public Space
- 8: The Production of a Memorial Place
- 9: Bringing the Dead Back Home
- 10: Memorialisation of US College and University Tragedies
- 11: Private Spaces for the Dead
- IV: Art and Design in Service of Remembrance and Mourning
- 12: Living to Living, Living to Dead
- 13: Maxwell Fry and the 'Anatomy of Mourning'
- 14: The Living, The Dead and the Imagery of Emptiness and Re-appearance on the Battlefields of the Western Front
- 15: Art and Mourning in an Antarctic Landscape
by "Nielsen BookData"