Death, Ritual, and Belief: The Rhetoric of Funerary RitesBloomsbury Publishing, 2002 M06 1 - 272 pages Describing a great variety of funeral ritual from major world religions and from local traditions, this book shows how cultures not only cope with corpses but also create an added value for living through the encouragement of afterlife beliefs. The explosion of interest in death in recent years reflects the key theme of this book - the rhetoric of death - the way cultures use the most potent weapon of words to bring new power to life. This new edition is one third longer than the original with new material on the death of Jesus, the most theorized death ever which offers a useful case study for students. There is also empirical material from contemporary/recent events such as the death of Diana and an expanded section on theories of grief which will make the book more attractive to death counsellors. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 56
Page 4
... relationships which grow between individual men , women and children , as members of families and society , help foster that sense of who they are and of their purpose in the world . Here identity and destiny become intimately combined ...
... relationships which grow between individual men , women and children , as members of families and society , help foster that sense of who they are and of their purpose in the world . Here identity and destiny become intimately combined ...
Page 5
... relationships . But , as a form of self - reflection , it also reflects the depth of human life itself : life , not as some abstract idea , but as the very physical experience of ourselves and of those with whom we live and work . The ...
... relationships . But , as a form of self - reflection , it also reflects the depth of human life itself : life , not as some abstract idea , but as the very physical experience of ourselves and of those with whom we live and work . The ...
Page 10
... relationship with the physical bodies of its constituent members : Society imparts its own character of permanence to the individuals who compose it : because it feels itself immortal and wants to be so , it cannot normally believe that ...
... relationship with the physical bodies of its constituent members : Society imparts its own character of permanence to the individuals who compose it : because it feels itself immortal and wants to be so , it cannot normally believe that ...
Page 11
... relationships only some of which change after death . ' What dies is the matrilineal person or the individual ' , associated with the soft parts of the body and corpse , while the patrilineal ' person ' continues in the form of hard ...
... relationships only some of which change after death . ' What dies is the matrilineal person or the individual ' , associated with the soft parts of the body and corpse , while the patrilineal ' person ' continues in the form of hard ...
Page 13
... relationships . This is an important point which can easily be ignored by people unfamiliar with the social sciences , especially since the term ' role- model ' flourishes in popular speech despite the fact that some sociologists like ...
... relationships . This is an important point which can easily be ignored by people unfamiliar with the social sciences , especially since the term ' role- model ' flourishes in popular speech despite the fact that some sociologists like ...
Contents
1 | |
Impurity Fertility and Fear | 24 |
3 Theories of Grief | 43 |
4 Violence Sacrifice and Conquest | 62 |
5 Eastern Destiny and Death | 81 |
6 Ancestors Cemeteries and Local Identity | 91 |
7 Jewish and Islamic Destinies | 118 |
8 Christianity and the Death of Jesus | 125 |
10 Somewhere to Die | 155 |
11 Souls and the Presence of the Dead | 163 |
12 Pet and Animal Death | 182 |
13 Book Film and Building | 196 |
14 Offending Death Grief and Religions | 211 |
15 Secular Death and Life | 224 |
Bibliography | 240 |
Index | 258 |
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Common terms and phrases
afterlife amongst ancestors animals anthropologist argued ashes aspects associated become belief bereavement Bloch body Britain British British Humanist Association Buddhism burial buried cemeteries cent Chapter Christian church concerned contemporary context corpse cremated remains crematoria cultures D. J. Davies death rites deceased described dying emotion emphasize especially euthanasia example existence express fact fact of death focused funeral rites funerary rites grave grief groups human idea identity important increasingly individual interpreted involved issue Jesus kind living major memory modern Mormon mortuary mummification nature near-death experience offending death particular performative utterance period pet death popular post-modernity practice psychological realm rebounding violence reflects reincarnation relationship relatively religion religious response resurrection rhetoric ritual sacrifice salvation secular sense shamanism significance social society sociological soul speak spiritual status stress stupa symbolic theological theory tomb traditional transcendence twentieth century words against death Zoroastrians