ABSTRACT

The Routledge Companion to Death and Literature seeks to understand the ways in which literature has engaged deeply with the ever-evolving relationship humanity has with its ultimate demise. It is the most comprehensive collection in this growing field of study and includes essays by Brian McHale, Catherine Belling, Ronald Schleifer, Helen Swift, and Ira Nadel, as well as the work of a generation of younger scholars from around the globe, who bring valuable transnational insights.

Encompassing a diverse range of mediums and genres – including biography and autobiography, documentary, drama, elegy, film, the novel and graphic novel, opera, picturebooks, poetry, television, and more – the contributors offer a dynamic mix of approaches that range from expansive perspectives on particular periods and genres to extended analyses of select case studies. Essays are included from every major Western period, including Classical, Middle Ages, Renaissance, and so on, right up to the contemporary.

This collection provides a telling demonstration of the myriad ways that humanity has learned to live with the inevitability of death, where “live with” itself might mean any number of things: from consoling, to memorializing, to rationalizing, to fending off, to evading, and, perhaps most compellingly of all, to escaping. Engagingly written and drawing on examples from around the world, this volume is indispensable to both students and scholars working in the fields of medical humanities, thanatography (death studies), life writing, Victorian studies, modernist studies, narrative, contemporary fiction, popular culture, and more.

part I|86 pages

Traversing the Ontological Divide

chapter 1|11 pages

The Final Frontier

Science Fictions of Death

chapter 2|9 pages

“Still I Danced”

Performing Death in Ford’s The Broken Heart

chapter 5|9 pages

Literature and the Afterlife

chapter 6|9 pages

The Novel as Heartbeat

The Dead Narrator in Mike McCormack’s Solar Bones

chapter 7|12 pages

Dead Man/and Woman Talking

Narratives from Beyond the Grave

chapter 8|8 pages

The View from Upstream

Authority and Projection in Fontenelle’s Nouveaux dialogues des morts

part II|63 pages

Genres

chapter 9|12 pages

Big Questions

Re-Visioning and Re-Scripting Death Narratives in Children’s Literature

chapter 10|12 pages

In the U-Bend with Moaning Myrtle

Thinking about Death in YA Literature

chapter 12|9 pages

Death and Documentaries

Heuristics for the Real in an Age of Simulation

chapter 13|8 pages

Death and the Fanciulla

chapter 14|14 pages

Death, Literary Form, and Affective Comprehension

Primary Emotions and the Neurological Basis of Genre

part III|86 pages

Site, Space, and Spatiality

chapter 15|12 pages

Ecocide and the Anthropocene

Death and the Environment

chapter 16|9 pages

A Disney Death

Coco, Black Panther, and the Limits of the Afterlife

chapter 18|16 pages

Institutions and Elegies

Viewing the Dead in W. B. Yeats and John Wieners

chapter 19|10 pages

Death “after Long Silence”

Auditing Agamben’s Metaphysics of Negativity in Yeats’s Lyric

chapter 21|13 pages

“Memento Mori”

Memory, Death, and Posterity in Singapore’s Poetry

part IV|89 pages

Rituals, Memorials, and Epitaphs

chapter 23|9 pages

Fictional Will

chapter 25|12 pages

Death and Gothic Romanticism

Dilating in/upon the Graveyard, Meditating among the Tombs

chapter 27|9 pages

The Aura of the Phonographic Relic

Hearing the Voices of the Dead

chapter 28|12 pages

Anecdotal Death

Samuel Johnson’s Lives of the English Poets

chapter 29|11 pages

Biography

Life after Death

part V|62 pages

Living with Death

chapter 30|9 pages

“An immense expenditure of energy come to nothing”

Philosophy, Literature, and Death in Peter Weiss’s Abschied von den Eltern

chapter 31|8 pages

Paradox, Death, and the Divine

chapter 34|11 pages

When Time Stops

Death and Autobiography in Contemporary Personal Narratives

chapter 35|10 pages

“Grief made her insubstantial to herself”

Illness, Aging, and Death in A. S. Byatt’s Little Black Book of Stories

part VI|62 pages

Historical Engagements

chapter 36|9 pages

On the Corpse of a Loved One in the Era of Brain Death

Bioethics and Fictions

chapter 37|10 pages

Death to the Music of Time

Reticence in Anthony Powell’s Mediated Narratives of Death

chapter 38|9 pages

Death and Chinese War Television Dramas

(Re)configuring Ethical Judgments in The Disguiser

chapter 40|8 pages

“Doubtfull Drede”

Dying at the End of the Middle Ages

chapter 42|5 pages

Coda