The book tackles the challenging theme of death as seen through the lens of literature and its connections with history, the visual arts, anthropology, philosophy and other fields in humanities. It searches for answers to three questions: what can we know about death; how is death socialised; and how and for which purposes is death aesthetically shaped? Unlike many other publications, the volume does not endorse the fallacy of over-simplifying death by seeing it either in an exclusively positive light or by reducing it to a purely literary figure. Using literature’s potential to stimulate critical thinking, many contemporary stereotypical configurations of death and dying are debunked, and many hitherto unforeseen ways in which death functions as a complex trigger of meaning-making are revealed. The book proves that death is an inexhaustible source of meanings which should be understood as peremptorily plural, discontinuous, problematic, competitive, and often conflictual. It offers original contributions to the field of death studies and also to literary and cultural studies.
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The book tackles the challenging theme of death as seen through the lens of literature and its connections with history, the visual arts, anthropology, philosophy and other fields in humanities.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781527527546
Publisert
2019-04-01
Utgiver
Vendor
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Høyde
212 mm
Bredde
148 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
302

Redaktør

Om bidragsyterne

Adriana Teodorescu holds a PhD in Comparative Literature, and is Associate Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at Babeș-Bolyai University, Romania. In 2016, she organized a seminar at Harvard University on death in literature, as part of the American Comparative Literature Association’s Annual Meeting. She has been co-organizer of the annual “International Conference on Dying and Death in 18th-21st Century Europe” since 2010. She is the editor of Death Representations in Literature. Forms and Theories (2015) and co-editor of the Dying and Death in 18th-21st Century Europe volumes (2011 and 2014). Her most recent publications include “The Contemporary Imaginary of Work. Symbolic Immortality within the Postmodern Corporate Discourse”, in Postmortal Society: Towards a Sociology of Immortality (2017) and “The Women-Nature Connection as a Key Element in the Social Construction of Western Contemporary Motherhood”, in Women and Nature? Beyond Dualism in Gender, Body, and Environment (2017).