Exploring the Immortological Imagination: Advocating for a Sociology of Immortality

Author:

Nowaczyk-Basińska Katarzyna1,Kiel Paula2

Affiliation:

1. Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence (CFI), University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 1SB, UK

2. Department of Media and Communications, London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), London WC2A 2AE, UK

Abstract

The digital age has rekindled popular and academic interest in immortality. While the idea of immortality has long been recognized as fundamental to human societies, unlike death, within the field of sociology, immortality has not yet established itself as a distinct and autonomous field of study. This paper contributes to the recently emerging scholarship promoting a sociology of immortality. Drawing inspiration from C. Wright Mills’s sociological imagination (1959) and building upon significant research in the field of immortality, we offer to use the concept of the immortological imagination as an analytical and conceptual tool for further developing a sociology of immortality. We refer to the immortological imagination as a complementary concept to Penfold-Mounce’s thanatological imagination, seeing both concepts as stemming from two different lineages and academic traditions. After defining the immortological imagination and how it differs from and complements the thanatological imagination, the paper moves to discuss examples in popular culture establishing the potential impacts and influences of the immortological imagination, particularly within the digital context.

Funder

Leverhulme Trust

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference64 articles.

1. Ariès, Philippe (1982). The Hour of Our Death, Penguin.

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3. Backer, Barbara A., Hannon, Natalie, and Russell, Noreen A. (1982). Death and Dying: Individuals and Institutions, John Wiley and Sons.

4. The rights of the corpse;Baglow;Mortality,2007

5. Bal, Mieke (2009). Narratology: Introduction to the Theory of Narrative, University of Toronto Press.

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