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El. knyga: Emotion, Identity and Death: Mortality Across Disciplines [Taylor & Francis e-book]

  • Formatas: 248 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Nov-2016
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315579221
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 166,18 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 237,40 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 248 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 17-Nov-2016
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781315579221
Death affects all aspects of life, it touches our emotions and influences our identity. Presenting a kaleidoscope of informative views of death, dying and human response, this book reveals how different disciplines contribute to understanding the theme of death. Drawing together new and established scholars, this is the first book among the studies of emotion that focuses on issues surrounding death, and the first among death studies that focuses on the issue of emotion.

Death affects all aspects of life, it touches our emotions and influences our identity. Presenting a kaleidoscope of informative views of death, dying and human response, this book reveals how different disciplines contribute to understanding the theme of death. Drawing together new and established scholars, this is the first book among the studies of emotion that focuses on issues surrounding death, and the first among death studies which focuses on the issue of emotion. Themes explored include: themes of grief in the ties that bind the living and the dead, funerals, public memorials and the art of consolation, obituaries and issues of war and death-row, use of the internet in dying and grieving, what people do with cremated remains, new rituals of spiritual care in medical contexts, themes bounded and expressed through music, and more.
Introduction Emotion, Identity and Death, Douglas J. Davies, Chang-Won
Park;
Chapter 1 The Postmodern Obituary: Why Honesty Matters, Tim Bullamore;
Chapter 2 Chronic Illness, Awareness of Death, and the Ambiguity of Peer
Identification, Eva Jeppsson Grassman;
Chapter 3 Nationalization and
Mediatized Ritualization: The Broadcast Farewell of Fadime Sahindal, Eva
Reimers;
Chapter 4 Wiring Death: Dying, Grieving and Remembering on the
Internet, Tim Hutchings;
Chapter 5 Individuals and Relationships: On the
Possibilities and Impossibilities of Presence, Arnar Įrnason;
Chapter 6 1I
wish to express my thanks to my sister, Jessica Kohn McGuire, for initially
inviting me to visit her client on Death Row and meet other colleagues
involved in the California State Public Defenders office. I also wish to
thank colleagues at the University of Melbourne who helped me work through
initial ideas (see note 4 below), to Sean Williams, Stuart Kirsch, Jens Zinn,
Erin Fitz-Henry and to Douglas Davies and Chang-Won Park, the editors of this
volume. Finally, I am forever grateful to Manny and Jay for teaching me so
much., Tamara Kohn;
Chapter 7 Sojourn, Transformative: Emotionand Identity in
the Dying, Death, and Disposal of an Ex-Spouse, Jacque Lynn Foltyn;
Chapter 8
Seeing Differently: Place, Art, and Consolation, Christina Marsden Gillis;
Chapter 9 Sacramentality and Identity Transformation: Deathbed Ritualsin
Dutch Spiritual Care, Thomas Quartier;
Chapter 10 Every Funeral Unique in
(Y)our Way! Professionals Propagating Cremation Rituals, Meike Heessels;
Chapter 11 Designing a Place for Goodbye: The Architecture of Crematoria in
the Netherlands, MirjamKlaassens, PeterGroote;
Chapter 12 New Identity of All
Souls Day Celebrations in the Netherlands: Extra-Ecclesiastic Commemoration
of the Dead, Art, and Religiosity, EricVenbrux;
Chapter 13 A Dream of
Immortality: Mahlers Das Lied von der Erde (The Song of the Earth),
Hyun-AhKim;
Chapter 14 De morte transire ad vitam? Emotion and Identity in
Nineteenth-Century Requiem Compositions, WolfgangMarx;
Chapter 15 War without
Death: Americas Ingenious Plan to Defeat Enemies without Bloodshed, John
Troyer;
Douglas Davies, Professor in the Study of Religion and Director of The Centre for Death and Life Studies, Durham University. Chang-Won Park, Honorary Research Associate, The Centre for Death and Life Studies, Durham University and Senior Research Fellow, Institute for the Study of Religion, Sogang University, South Korea.