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The Funerary International series comprises essential reference texts for policy-makers, practitioners and academics with an interest in funerary practices globally. Each book has a country or region specific focus, addressing a standard framework of questions to aid comparison. This book sets English and Welsh funerary practice in its wider legal, national and local governance framework, including the continuing role of the Church of England. It provides the historical context for current practice, provides data on new trends in burial and cremation and examines recent developments including direct cremation and alkaline hydrolysis. It provides detail of current practice and includes a detailed description of a typical funeral, including commemorative practice, and discussion of funeral costs. Chapters address the legalities and technicalities of burial and cremation, explaining the concept of burial rights and the technicalities of grave construction, and outlining cremation certification requirements and the process of cremation. This book is a valuable desk-top resource to give a broader frame of reference for policy makers, and to provide explanation of key concepts for practitioners who may be new to this area of work. The text will be of particular value to academics that may be unfamiliar with the legal, technical and professional aspects of the funerary industry. The text is fully referenced, with an additional bibliography of further reading, and includes illustrations, charts, tables, diagrams and boxed text including key information.
Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Funerals --- Mortuary ceremonies --- Obsequies --- Manners and customs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Burial --- Cremation --- Cryomation --- Dead --- Mourning customs --- Social Science, Death & Dying. --- Sociology: death & dying.
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The human body is the locus of meaning, personhood, and our sense of the possibility of sanctity. The desecration of the human corpse is a matter of universal revulsion, taboo in virtually all human cultures. Not least for this reason, the unburied corpse quickly becomes a focal point of political salience, on the one hand seeming to express the contempt of state power toward the basic claims of human dignity--while on the other hand simultaneously bringing into question the very legitimacy of that power. In Unburied Bodies: Subversive Corpses and the Authority of the Dead, James Martel surveys the power of the body left unburied to motivate resistance, to bring forth a radically new form of agency, and to undercut the authority claims made by state power. Ranging across time and space from the battlefields of ancient Thebes to the streets of Ferguson, Missouri, and taking in perspectives from such writers as Sophocles, Machiavelli, Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, James Baldwin, Judith Butler, Thomas Lacqueur, and Bonnie Honig, Martel asks why the presence of the abandoned corpse can be seen by both authorities and protesters as a source of power, and how those who have been abandoned or marginalized by structures of authority can find in a lifeless body fellow accomplices in their aspirations for dignity and humanity.
Society & culture: general --- Dead --- Death --- Social aspects. --- Political aspects. --- Dying --- End of life --- Life --- Terminal care --- Terminally ill --- Thanatology --- Cadavers --- Corpses --- Deceased --- Human remains --- Remains, Human --- Burial --- Corpse removals --- Cremation --- Cryomation --- Death notices --- Embalming --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Obituaries --- Philosophy
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Back cover: Die kostspielige Aufwendung von Resourcen zur Totenbestattung hat eine lange Tradition in der Begräbniskultu Chinas. Ebenso lang ist aber auch die Geschichte der Kritik gegenüber solch kostspieligen Bestattungspraktiken. Die vorliegende Arbeit zeichnet Kontinuität und Wandel von Praxis und Kritik nach und analysiert sowohl im Kontext der religionspolitischen Entwicklungen Chinas als auch der religionswissenschaftlichen Theoriebildung.
Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Burial --- 291.3 --- Burial customs --- Burying-grounds --- Graves --- Interment --- Archaeology --- Public health --- Coffins --- Dead --- Grave digging --- Funerals --- Mortuary ceremonies --- Obsequies --- Manners and customs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Cremation --- Mourning customs --- 291.3 Godsdienstwetenschap: cultus; liturgie --- Godsdienstwetenschap: cultus; liturgie --- History --- Cryomation
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This volume comprises the proceedings of an international workshop that took place at the UCLouvain in Belgium on the 8th and 9th of December 2016. This workshop addressed the topic of collective burial practices, focusing on two main questions: "Who are the deceased buried together in collective tombs?" and "Why are these deceased buried collectively?" Archaeologists, ethnologists and ethnoarchaeologists were thus invited to discuss the identity of the deceased deposited in collective burial places, as well as the ideological and social motivations for gathering the dead in the same tomb over several generations. The chapters in the volume examine case studies ranging from contemporary Madagascar and Austronesia to the Prehistoric Mediterranean and Dynastic Europe. They also reinitiate discussions regarding the potential of archaeological and anthropobiological datasets to approach social organization among past populations.
Burial. --- Death --- Archaeology --- Burial --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Excavations (Archaeology) --- Funerals --- Mortuary ceremonies --- Obsequies --- Manners and customs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Cremation --- Cryomation --- Dead --- Mourning customs --- Burial customs --- Burying-grounds --- Graves --- Interment --- Public health --- Coffins --- Grave digging --- Customs and practices --- Conferences - Meetings --- Funeral rites and ceremonies. --- Human remains (Archaeology). --- Mass burials --- Social aspects.
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Death was a constant, visible presence in medieval and renaissance Europe. Yet, the acknowledgement of death did not necessarily amount to an acceptance of its finality. Whether they were commoners, clergy, aristocrats, or kings, the dead continued to function literally as integrated members of their communities long after they were laid to rest in their graves. From stories of revenants bringing pleas from Purgatory to the living, to the practical uses and regulation of burial space; from the tradition of the ars moriendi, to the depiction of death on the stage; and from the making of martyrs, to funerals for the rich and poor, this volume examines how communities dealt with their dead as continual, albeit non-living members.
Death --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Dead --- History. --- Europe --- History --- Dying --- End of life --- Life --- Terminal care --- Terminally ill --- Thanatology --- Cadavers --- Corpses --- Deceased --- Human remains --- Remains, Human --- Burial --- Corpse removals --- Cremation --- Death notices --- Embalming --- Obituaries --- Funerals --- Mortuary ceremonies --- Obsequies --- Manners and customs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Mourning customs --- Philosophy --- E-books --- Dead. --- Death. --- Funeral rites and ceremonies. --- 476-1517 --- Europe. --- Cryomation --- Council of Europe countries --- Eastern Hemisphere --- Eurasia
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Philosophy, Socrates declared, is the art of dying. This book underscores that it is also the art of learning to live and share the earth with those who have come before us. Burial, with its surrounding rituals, is the most ancient documented cultural-symbolic practice: all humans have developed techniques of caring for and communicating with the dead. The premise of Being with the Dead is that we can explore our lives with the dead as a cross-cultural existential a priori out of which the basic forms of historical consciousness emerge. Care for the dead is not just about the symbolic handling of mortal remains; it also points to a necropolitics, the social bond between the dead and living that holds societies together—a shared space or polis where the dead are maintained among the living. Moving from mortuary rituals to literary representations, from the problem of ancestrality to technologies of survival and intergenerational communication, Hans Ruin explores the epistemological, ethical, and ontological dimensions of what it means to be with the dead. His phenomenological approach to key sources in a range of fields gives us a new perspective on the human sciences as a whole.
Burial --- Dead. --- Funeral rites and ceremonies. --- Memory (Philosophy) --- Philosophy --- Funerals --- Mortuary ceremonies --- Obsequies --- Manners and customs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Cremation --- Cryomation --- Dead --- Mourning customs --- Cadavers --- Corpses --- Deceased --- Human remains --- Remains, Human --- Death --- Corpse removals --- Death notices --- Embalming --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Obituaries --- Burial customs --- Burying-grounds --- Graves --- Interment --- Archaeology --- Public health --- Coffins --- Grave digging --- Philosophy. --- Ancestrality. --- Anthropology. --- Archaeology. --- Burial. --- Death. --- Deconstruction. --- History. --- Memory. --- Necropolitics. --- Phenomenology. --- Memory (Philosophy).
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"Oud worden en sterven is vandaag een brandend actueel thema en op veel manieren ook een taboe. Ik wil heel graag heel oud worden en zonder angst kunnen sterven. Hoe doet de wereld dat? Op die vraag probeer ik antwoorden te vinden." - Lieve BlancquaertElke seconde sterven er twee mensen en voor ieder mens heeft doodgaan een andere betekenis, is er een ander verhaal. Last Days is het derde en laatste deel van Lieve Blancquaerts drieluik over de grote momenten uit een mensenleven. In Birth Day en Wedding Day onderzocht ze hoe we onze kinderen verwelkomen en hoe we liefhebben. Met het laatste deel maakt ze de cirkel rond en vertelt ze hoe de wereld afscheid neemt, aan de hand van prachtige beelden en ontroerende verhalen uit verschillende culturen en godsdiensten. Meer nog dan een boek over sterven is Last Days een ode aan het leven. Boek bij de gelijknamige reportagereeks, die vanaf september 2018 zal worden uitgezonden op VRT en VPRO.Bron: https://www.exhibitionsinternational.be/documents/catalog/9789492677587.xml
418.7 --- burials --- documentary photography --- dood --- Photography --- Blancquaert, Lieve --- Photography, Artistic --- Funeral rites and ceremonies --- 906.1 --- 761.2 fotografen afzonderlijk --- portretfotografie --- reportagefotografie (documentaire fotografie) --- sterven --- cultuursociologie --- Funerals --- Mortuary ceremonies --- Obsequies --- Manners and customs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Burial --- Cremation --- Dead --- Mourning customs --- Artistic photography --- Photography, Pictorial --- Pictorial photography --- Art --- geboorte, huwelijk, dood --- Geschiedenis, --- Aesthetics --- Blancquaert, Lieve. --- #gsdbQ821.BE.OUD --- Philosophical anthropology --- Filosofische antropologie --- Fotografie --- documentaire fotografie --- begrafenissen --- Ouderen --- Rouwen --- Verliesverwerking --- Cultuurverschillen --- Afscheid nemen --- Culturele antropologie --- Sterven --- Foto's --- Cryomation --- Geschiedenis, geboorte, huwelijk, dood --- Oudere --- Cultuurverschil --- Foto --- Gemeenschap --- School --- Buurt
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This powerful and original account details how these new matters of death, dying, and funerals have become entrenched in peoples' everyday lives and become part of a quest to create dignity in the wake of a devastating epidemic.
Funeral rites and ceremonies --- Social change --- HIV infections --- AIDS (Disease) --- Social aspects --- Swaziland --- Social life and customs --- Acquired immune deficiency syndrome --- Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome --- Acquired immunological deficiency syndrome --- Immunological deficiency syndromes --- Virus-induced immunosuppression --- HIV (Viruses) infections --- HTLV-III infections --- HTLV-III-LAV infections --- Human T-lymphotropic virus III infections --- Lentivirus infections --- Sexually transmitted diseases --- Change, Social --- Cultural change --- Cultural transformation --- Societal change --- Socio-cultural change --- Social history --- Social evolution --- Funerals --- Mortuary ceremonies --- Obsequies --- Manners and customs --- Rites and ceremonies --- Burial --- Cremation --- Cryomation --- Dead --- Mourning customs --- Svazilend --- kaNgwane --- Umbuso weSwatini --- Kingdom of Swaziland --- Swaziland Government --- Ngwane --- Swasieland --- スワジランド --- Suwajirando --- スワージランド --- Eswatini --- Government of the Kingdom of Eswatini --- Kingdom of Eswatini
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