Dying serves so often within the narratives of Western popular culture, as an exercise in self-improvement both to the individual dying and to those looking on. It enlightens, ennobles and renders exceptional all those affected by it. Though mainstream cinema's “grammar of dying” is mired in similar myths, film has the potential to do dying differently: it can, instead, connect us, ethically, to the vulnerability of others. The aim of this article is to pursue this potential of film. Using the mainstream grammar of dying as a starting point, I will consider how the moving image, and this ethical potential, is harnessed within two hybrid-media pieces about a loved-one's decline and death: George Saxon's art installation, “A Record of Undying...
Sociocultural conceptions of death and dying are a vast, multidimensional collection. The capacity f...
This paper is concerned with the social, spiritual and expressive ways of dealing with the pain of g...
This article considers recent media texts from four Western countries that invite audiences to watch...
Dying serves so often within the narratives of Western popular culture, as an exercise in self-impro...
This work examined the connection between stories about death and dying and Booker\u27s rebirth plot...
Filming death and dying has taboo status in terms of what western society can and cannot sanction - ...
After the sexual revolution of the 1970s, death is the ultimate taboo in contemporary Western societ...
This thesis is about the dying individual. The institutionalisation of death in the West has led to ...
The end-of-life documentaries that focus on natural death struggle with the question as to whether c...
This practice-based research was inspired from a need to make sense of death and potentially dying ...
This paper focuses on 'death scenes' in the context of film. Death haunts our living as an immanence...
As death returned to make its mark on the world with the COVID-19 pandemic and, consequently, resurf...
The 20th century saw a strengthening of medicalization processes, which included a medicalization of...
Since their inception, movies have served as the meter of popular culture, reflecting the customs, t...
In a world denying and deconstructing mortality, the intersection between the phenomenology of image...
Sociocultural conceptions of death and dying are a vast, multidimensional collection. The capacity f...
This paper is concerned with the social, spiritual and expressive ways of dealing with the pain of g...
This article considers recent media texts from four Western countries that invite audiences to watch...
Dying serves so often within the narratives of Western popular culture, as an exercise in self-impro...
This work examined the connection between stories about death and dying and Booker\u27s rebirth plot...
Filming death and dying has taboo status in terms of what western society can and cannot sanction - ...
After the sexual revolution of the 1970s, death is the ultimate taboo in contemporary Western societ...
This thesis is about the dying individual. The institutionalisation of death in the West has led to ...
The end-of-life documentaries that focus on natural death struggle with the question as to whether c...
This practice-based research was inspired from a need to make sense of death and potentially dying ...
This paper focuses on 'death scenes' in the context of film. Death haunts our living as an immanence...
As death returned to make its mark on the world with the COVID-19 pandemic and, consequently, resurf...
The 20th century saw a strengthening of medicalization processes, which included a medicalization of...
Since their inception, movies have served as the meter of popular culture, reflecting the customs, t...
In a world denying and deconstructing mortality, the intersection between the phenomenology of image...
Sociocultural conceptions of death and dying are a vast, multidimensional collection. The capacity f...
This paper is concerned with the social, spiritual and expressive ways of dealing with the pain of g...
This article considers recent media texts from four Western countries that invite audiences to watch...