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Cambridge Handbook for the Anthropology of Death [Kõva köide]

Edited by (George Washington University, Washington DC), Edited by (Washington State University), Edited by (MICA)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 590 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Sari: Cambridge Handbooks in Anthropology
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1316510565
  • ISBN-13: 9781316510568
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 590 pages, Worked examples or Exercises
  • Sari: Cambridge Handbooks in Anthropology
  • Ilmumisaeg: 31-May-2026
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1316510565
  • ISBN-13: 9781316510568
Shaped by important shifts in the field and a global pandemic, this Handbook provides a fresh look at the anthropology of death. It is split into five parts, with chapters examining how deathcare happens and the kinds of relationships that arise between the living, the dying, and the dead; how rituals change and also endure; and how societies make sense of and live with death both everyday and catastrophic. It draws on theories of social death and necropolitics, as well as death's materiality and more-than-human experiences of death and grief, inviting a broader understanding of the subject itself. With contributors from within and beyond the fields of anthropology and death studies, it bridges gaps in scholarly dialogues around life from death and death's afterlife of mourning and memory. The ethnographically grounded individual studies combine to underscore why death matters in new and urgent ways beyond concerns of just human life.

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A novel look at death and dying, this Handbook tackles ritual change, catastrophic loss, and 21st-century living with the dead.
Foreword Thomas Laqueur; Acknowledgements; Introduction Sarah L.
Richardson, Sarah E. Wagner and Ruth E. Toulson; Part I. Everyday Dying and
Deathwork: Introduction to Part I Sarah E. Wagner, Ruth E. Toulson and Sarah
L. Richardson;
1. The work of cleaning up lonely death in Japan Anne Allison;
2. Nursing homes before and during COVID-19 Ann Neumann;
3. The circle Casey
Golomski;
4. Deathcare workers and ritual change in urban China Huwy-min
Lucia Liu;
5. Mastering dying: understanding end-of-life care as a cultural
practice through policy Erica Borgstrom;
6. The rise of the African American
undertaker and funeral directress in Baltimore, 18721920 Kami Fletcher;
7.
Of ancestors and mourning gowns: rethinking ritual and all that it might mean
Ruth E. Toulson; Part II. Materiality and the Corpse: Transformations:
Introduction to Part II Ruth E. Toulson;
8. The mantelpiece urn Shannon Lee
Dawdy;
9. Resistant remains: material presences and the transformability of
ash Zuzanna Dziuban;
10. New 'techniques du corpse': reflections on future
directions for body disposal Tamara Kohn, Hannah Gould and Bjørn Nansen;
11.
Time, death, and memory: bodies in transformation Elizabeth Hallam;
12. Death
and Earth deity in Vietnam Heonik Kwon; Part III. Life from Death:
Introduction to Part III Sarah L. Richardson;
13. Muted martyrdom: divergent
claims for life from death in capitalism Graham Denyer Willis;
14. Photos of
the Inconnu: death life images from the archives of the Paris police Robert
Desjarlais;
15. Generative grammars: Cuerpos Gramaticales against impunity
Sarah L. Richardson; Part IV. Necropolitics: Introduction to Part IV Sarah E.
Wagner, Sarah L. Richardson and Ruth E. Toulson;
16. Beyond the relic:
unmaking Franco's funerary project in the Valley of the Fallen (Spain)
Francisco Ferrándiz;
17. A necropolitical roadmap to 'normalization':
US-Vietnamese war dead accounting and the 'sad refrain' of drifting damage
Tâm T. T. Ngô and Sarah Wagner;
18. The politics of forensic identification
along the USMexico border Robin Reineke;
19. History under the weather:
political transitions, regimes of animation, and the dead in postwar Andean
Peru Isaias Rojas-Perez; Part V. Beyond Death: Introduction to Part V Sarah
E. Wagner, Sarah L. Richardson and Ruth E. Toulson;
20. Defending Black
ancestors Aja Lans;
21. Hart Island: an ordinary massed grave Sally Raudon;
22. Biological infinitude: the decoupling of chronology and biology Abou
Farman;
23. Sacred pixels: making meaning in Zoom funerals during the
COVID-19 pandemic Joel C. Kuipers and Roy R. Grinker;
24. Stolen deaths in
the abbreviated rites of the COVID-19 pandemic in Brazil Andreia Vicente da
Silva;
25. Locating grief: pandemic memory, mourning, and the politics of
where Martha Greenwald, Maria Jose Pelaez and Sarah Wagner;
26. Grieving
animals Barbara J. King; Conclusion Sarah E. Wagner, Ruth E. Toulson and
Sarah L. Richardson; Index.
Sarah L. Richardson is a Research Affiliate at Washington State University and owner of Pitch Pine Editorial. She investigates state violence, human rights, and systems of impunity, focusing particularly on sensemaking, visuality, and material culture. Sarah E. Wagner is Professor of Anthropology at George Washington University. She is the author of What Remains (Harvard University Press, 2019). Her research focuses on post-conflict societies, memory, national identity, and forensic science, and, most recently, on COVID-19 death and mourning. Ruth E. Toulson is Professor of Anthropology at Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore. She is the author of Necropolitics of the Ordinary (University of Washington Press, 2024) and co-editor of The Materiality of Mourning (with Newby, Routledge, 2019).