Tuesday, September 18, 2007
18th September
I've been away - at an academic conference in Bath called "The Social Context of Death, Dying and Disposal".
Or DDD8 to its friends.
We all laugh a bit uneasily when I tell my friends where I have been.
Yet I also add that this is one of the best academic conferences I have ever attended.
I came away having attended papers on:
I've been away - at an academic conference in Bath called "The Social Context of Death, Dying and Disposal".
Or DDD8 to its friends.
We all laugh a bit uneasily when I tell my friends where I have been.
Yet I also add that this is one of the best academic conferences I have ever attended.
I came away having attended papers on:
- The inadequacy of current medical definitions of ‘brain death’ as the measure of the moment of dying
- Clothes for death: croatian women and the clothes they have prepared to die in
- Lifting the Lid: description of a ceremonial theatre event in Bristol connected with people’s grieving
- Death education in newcastle, Australia: the world cafe
- how nursing homes, in theur architecture and organisation, amplify disorientation and increase suffering of the last days
- ‘I must hire a lttle room to die in’ the dying experience of the Victorian poor
- the loneliness of the dying: their entering a place where empathy is difficult, maybe impossible
- biographical pain at the end of life
- sacred dying
- a holistic view of dying
- The provisions of mortuaries in London 1866-89
- near death experiences
- house shrines in the Netherlands
- Death of the people’s singer
- public memorials
- finding the right place for cremated remains
- place attachments for eternity: burial places in brazil france, and spain
- Our present cultural discomfort around death and bereavement
- Blogs as a means of communicating and overcoming grief....
..each of which in their own way utterly fascinating.
And what's more, all presented in an atmosphere of friendliness and mutual criticism and support.
There were none of the distortions of insecurity and vanity that are so familiar to me from other conferences.
It's as if they all, very powerfully, in their own way illustrated an idea that was actually central to the conference:
that we need to change our culture from one that denies death to one which accepts it,
because:
to learn how to handle death is also to learn how best to handle life.
Labels: a matter of life and death
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