List of Figures
Introduction
Aubrey Thamann and Kalliopi M Christodoulaki
Part I: Delaying Death
Chapter 1. An Absent Presence: The
Co-Constitution of Loss
Alison Witchard
Chapter 2. Immortality and Existential Terror:
Learning the Language of Living Forever
Jeremy Cohen
Part II: Caregiving
Chapter 3. Living, Caring & Dying: Music and
the House of Endless Losses
Carina Nandlal
Chapter 4. Death and Fulfillment: Mortuary
Performance and the Impact on Self
Kalliopi M Christodoulaki
Part III: Confronting Death
Chapter 5. Crossroads: Life and Death in
Indiana
Aubrey Thamann
Chapter 6. “What has the field done to you?”
Researching Death, Dying, and Bereavement between Closeness and
Distance
Ekkehard Coenen
Chapter 7. The Historical Study of Death &
Dying: The Intersection of Familial Stories and Catholic
Rituals
Sarah Nytroe
Part IV: Memorialization
Chapter 8. Touch ‘Em All: Memorializing Harmon
Killebrew
Debbie Hanson
Chapter 9. After Life: Laying Flower Memes on
My Mother’s Grave and the Recollective Realm of Life after
Death
Olivia Guntarik and Claudia Bellote
Chapter 10. A Monumental Problem: Memorializing
the Jonestown Dead
Rebecca Moore
Chapter 11. Long Live Chill #LLC: Exploring
Grief, Memorial, & Ritual in African American R.I.P. T-shirt
Culture
Kami Fletcher
Conclusion
Kalliopi M Christodoulaki and Aubrey Thamann
Index
Aubrey Thamann is an American Studies scholar and anthropologist. Thamann has begun research into the fields of fat studies and food studies, specifically exploring where these fields intersect.
“…a wonderful edited collection I encourage any death scholar to read…I personally hope more volumes like this will emerge and that death scholars will continue to reflect about their subjective involvement in researching death as this makes for a richer field of study.” • Dead Good Reading “The book takes a reflexive approach so that the authors contribute both scholarship and personal reflections… it works very well.” • Simon Shimshon Rubin, University of Haifa “It’s good and interesting, with chapters that all have interesting things to say about matters of death and dying.” • Paul C. Rosenblatt, University of Minnesota
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