Affiliation:
1. University of Bath
2. University of Dundee
3. Goldsmiths College, University of London
Abstract
The article outlines the issues that the internet presents to death studies. Part 1 describes a range of online practices that may affect dying, the funeral, grief and memorialization, inheritance and archaeology; it also summarizes the kinds of research that have been done in these fields. Part 2 argues that these new online practices have implications for, and may be illuminated by, key concepts in death studies: the sequestration (or separation from everyday life) of death and dying, disenfranchisement of grief, private grief, social death, illness and grief narratives, continuing bonds with the dead, and the presence of the dead in society. In particular, social network sites can bring dying and grieving out of both the private and public realms and into the everyday life of social networks beyond the immediate family, and provide an audience for once private communications with the dead.
Subject
Life-span and Life-course Studies,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Health(social science)
Reference102 articles.
1. Online life after death
2. Beloff H. (2007). Immortality work: Photographs as memento mori. In Mitchell M. (Ed.), Remember me: Constructing immortality (pp. 179–192). London: Routledge.
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238 articles.
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