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Download: A Brief History of Death

This book brings into brief compass a subject that touches practically every aspect of life. The inevitable interest we all have in death – whether voiced or silent – is, often, unlike the interest we possess in other subjects. This one is infused with emotion, whether that of the experience of bereavement or of its anticipation, or of the thought of our own mortality. This brief volume seeks to capture some of these moods as reflected within the kaleidoscope of the history, religion and culture of many societies. I have taken as a guide for inclusion the interest shown by generations of students and others in particular aspects of death covered in courses I have taught, especially at Nottingham and Durham Universities. My own background in both social anthropology, involving empirical studies, and theology, with its reflective concerns, will also be evident throughout the text. Here I thank those who have hosted me in numerous places in the pursuit of my death research. The authorities responsible for Stockholm’s Woodland Crematorium and Bordeaux Crematorium allowed me to photograph at their sites, so too with Harry Heyink and Walter Carpey who also met me at their Amsterdam exhibition. I thank Roger Arber for his welcome at Golders Green Crematorium, as well as for his involvement in, and wider support of, my cremation research through the Golders Green Foundation and the Cremation Society of Great Britain. Professor W. Trutwin entertained me in Poland and took me on an unforgettable snow-covered New Year visit to Auschwitz, marked here through a photographed memorial. By complete contrast of context I recall several friends, especially Profs David Paulsen and David Whittaker and their welcome in Utah, re- flected in the Memorial Day photograph. The Aberfan photograph recalls L. J. who helped dig amidst the catastrophe and, unspeaking, took me to see the memorial. Finally, I take this opportunity to express thanks to Blackthorne Records for permission to use Ewan McColl’s evocatively instructive song ‘The Joy of Living’.
Douglas J. Davies
Durham
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