The paper contends that the scale of mortality is a more significant determinant of change in funerary practice than chronological periodisation. A concentration on scale suggests that change in funerary practice runs in cycles, reflecting the search by the bereaved for consolation that is undermined by the threat to individuation posed by industrial-level scales of operation and professionalization. Within this framework, the bereaved make active choices – depending on their unequal resources – amongst a range of products and services to secure consolation. England is posited as a case study to evidence cycles of change, and this paper uses historical data to consider change in use from churchyard to cemetery, from cemetery to crematorium,...
Funerals have long been of interest to social scientists. Previous sociological work has examined th...
The rise of natural burials has not been without controversy. Traditionalist funeralists and a numbe...
This paper reviews cemetery publications over the last twenty years and considers current trends and...
Funeral services are known to serve multiple functions for bereaved persons. There is also a common,...
This paper explores the place of a cemetery in a supposedly secular society. It shows that the commo...
Between the years 1500 and 1700, mortality was higher and exposure to death is greater than in the m...
Inhumation burials are recorded in Britain and Europe during excavations in a standardized way, espe...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
This article presents a new model of consolation that identifies five key themes: (1) an appeal to t...
This thesis engages with the recent innovation in British funerary rites known as ‘natural’ burial t...
Informants’ accounts of what they did with ashes they had chosen to remove from UK crematoria descri...
Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehens...
This article draws on data from a qualitative study of the destinations of ashes now being removed i...
Funerals have long been of interest to social scientists. Previous sociological work has examined th...
The rise of natural burials has not been without controversy. Traditionalist funeralists and a numbe...
This paper reviews cemetery publications over the last twenty years and considers current trends and...
Funeral services are known to serve multiple functions for bereaved persons. There is also a common,...
This paper explores the place of a cemetery in a supposedly secular society. It shows that the commo...
Between the years 1500 and 1700, mortality was higher and exposure to death is greater than in the m...
Inhumation burials are recorded in Britain and Europe during excavations in a standardized way, espe...
Deliberately deposited (or cached) objects are ubiquitous in the archaeological record, yet they are...
This article presents a new model of consolation that identifies five key themes: (1) an appeal to t...
This thesis engages with the recent innovation in British funerary rites known as ‘natural’ burial t...
Informants’ accounts of what they did with ashes they had chosen to remove from UK crematoria descri...
Modern, advanced healthcare detects and monitors long-term and life-limiting illness more comprehens...
This article draws on data from a qualitative study of the destinations of ashes now being removed i...
Funerals have long been of interest to social scientists. Previous sociological work has examined th...
The rise of natural burials has not been without controversy. Traditionalist funeralists and a numbe...
This paper reviews cemetery publications over the last twenty years and considers current trends and...