'… a stimulating and lucid volume … a book that will be of wide interest to … social scientists, students of health and illness and the body'. The Times Higher Education Supplement
A basic motivation for social and cultural life is the problem of death. By analysing the experiences of dying and bereaved people, as well as institutional responses to death, Clive Seale shows its importance for understanding the place of embodiment in social life. He draws on a comprehensive review of sociological, anthropological and historical studies, including his own research, to demonstrate the great variability that exists in human social constructions for managing mortality. Far from living in a 'death denying' society, dying and bereaved people in contemporary culture are often able to assert membership of an imagined community, through the narrative reconstruction of personal biography, drawing on a variety of cultural scripts emanating from medicine, psychology, the media and other sources. These insights are used to argue that the maintenance of the human social bond in the face of death is a continual resurrective practice, permeating everyday life.
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Part I. Social and Material Worlds: 1. Experiencing and representing the body; 2. Death, embodiment and social structure; 3. The social aspect of death; Part II. Representing Death: 4. Medicine, modernity and the risks of life; 5. The revival of death awareness; 6. Reporting death; Part III. Experiencing Death: 7. Falling from culture; 8. Awareness and control of dying; 9. Grief and resurrective practices.
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An introduction to the sociological study of death, dying and bereavement.
Product details
ISBN
9780521595094
Published
1998-10-08
Publisher
Cambridge University Press; Cambridge University Press
Weight
370 gr
Height
229 mm
Width
152 mm
Thickness
14 mm
Age
P, 06
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
248
Author