Human beings are grieving animals. ‘Consolation’, or an attempt to assuage grief, is an age-old response to loss which has various expressions in different cultural contexts. Over the past century, consolation has dropped off the West’s cultural radar. The contributions to this volume highlight this neglect of consolation in popular and academic discourses and explore the usefulness of the concept of consolation for analysing spatio-temporal constellations.
Consolationscapes in the Face of Loss brings together scholars from geography, philosophy, history, anthropology and religious studies. The chapters use spatial and conceptual mappings of grief and consolation to analyse a range of spaces and phenomena around grief, bereavement and remembrance, comfort and resilience, including battlefield memorials, crematoria, graveyards and natural burial sites in Europe. Authors shift the discussion beyond the Global North by including responses to traumatic grief in post-conflict African societies, as well as Australian Aboriginal traditions of ritual consolation.
The book focuses on the relationship between space/place and consolation. In so doing, it offers a new lens for research on death, grief and bereavement. It offers new insights for students and researchers interrogating contemporary bereavement, as well as those interested in meaning-making, emerging socio-cultural practices and their role in personal and collective resilience.
Introduction: From Deathscapes to Consolationscapes: Spaces, Practices
and Experiences of Consolation Part I: Reviving Consolation 1 What Is
Consolation? Towards a New Conceptual Framework 2 Bittersweet: Mapping Grief
and Consolation through the Lens of Deceased Organ Donation Part II: European
Constellations 3 Consolation and the Poetics of the Soil in Natural
Burial Sites 4 The Crematorium as a Ritual and Musical Consolationscape 5
Emotional Landscapes: Battlefield Memorials to Seventeenth-Century Civil war
Conflicts in England and Scotland 6 Danish Churchyards as Consolationscapes
Part III: Beyond the Global North 7 Moving through the Land: Consolation and
Space in Tiwi Aboriginal Death Rituals 8 Rituals, Healing and Consolation in
Post-Conflict Environments: The Case of the Matabeleland Massacre in Zimbabwe
9 Love the Dead, Fear the Dead: Creating Consolationsapes in Post-War
Northern Uganda 10 Its Gods Will: Consolation and Religious Meaning-Making
after a Family Death in Urban Senegal, Epilogue
Christoph Jedan is Professor of Ethics and Philosophy of Religion at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands.
Avril Maddrell is Professor of Social and Cultural Geography at the University of Reading, UK.
Eric Venbrux is Professor of Comparative Religion and Director of the Centre for Thanatology at Radboud University, the Netherlands.