ABSTRACT

Today, death is being reconceptualised around the world as heritage, replete with material markers and intangible performances. These heritages of death are personal, national and international. They are vernacular as well as official, sanctioned as well as alternative. This book brings together more than twenty international scholars to consider the heritage of death from spatial, political, religious, economic, cultural, aesthetic and emotive aspects. It showcases different attitudes and phases of death and their relationship to heritage through ethnographically informed case studies to illustrate both general patterns and local and national variations. Through analyses of material expressions and social practices of grief, mourning and remembrance, this book shows not only what death means in contemporary societies, but also how individuals, groups and nations act towards death.

part I|19 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|17 pages

Heritage of death

Emotion, memory and practice

part II|42 pages

Affect

chapter 2|15 pages

Graveside shrines

Private or public space?

chapter 4|13 pages

Taken “as read”

Locating death in the rhetoric of cemetery conservation in England

part III|42 pages

Celebrity

chapter 5|13 pages

“At last, Garbo is coming home”

Celebrity, death and nation

chapter 7|13 pages

The corpse, heritage, and tourism

The multiple ontologies of the body of King Richard III of England

part IV|40 pages

War

chapter 8|16 pages

The poppies exhibit

Producing and consuming commemoration of World War I in Britain

chapter 9|8 pages

At the shrine of the fallen

Conserving Australia’s war memorial heritage

chapter 10|14 pages

“Now you have visited the war”

The search for fallen soldiers in Russia

part V|48 pages

Oppression

chapter 11|17 pages

Armenia aeterna

Commemorative heritage in sound, sculpture, and movement from Bulgaria’s Armenian diaspora

chapter 12|14 pages

Uncovering violent narratives

The heritage of Stalinist repression in Russia since 1991

part VI|29 pages

Unbounded

chapter 14|14 pages

Death everywhere

Dissolving commemorative boundaries in a liquid world

chapter 15|13 pages

Tourists at Chernobyl

Existential meaning and digital media

part VII|13 pages

Epilogue