The argument of this thesis is that corpse disposal in England is a production process where value is generated out of the waste materials of the dead body. I make this argument by analysing the concept of value in two contemporary corpse disposal cultures; cremation and natural burial. This is because the concept of value has been effective for providing a critique of production as a process (Marx, 2013), as well as the management of materials more widely (Hetherington, 2004; Gibson, 2008). Throughout this thesis, I focus on two elements of investigating value in cremation and natural burial. The first of these questions how value is generated out of the waste materials of the corpse. I have found that the quantification of waste materials...
This paper shows how the human corpse can function as an aes- thetic-therapeutic for the deceased, t...
Solid waste disposal is now recognized worldwide as a critical issue that demands immediate attentio...
This thesis engages with the recent innovation in British funerary rites known as ‘natural’ burial t...
This thesis focuses on the complex cultural, social and material factors that combine to hasten the ...
This collection of six articles draws on contributions presented to the international symposium on ...
In current environmental discourse, disposal does not remove and destroy waste but rather transforms...
Since the 19th century, the deceased human body and its parts have been increasingly dehumanized, ob...
In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associ-at...
abstract: This thesis is structured proleptically, in the initial section I introduce the modern fun...
Abstract Methods for preparing and burying the dead vary widely across time and cultures, but an end...
This thesis explores the historical and contemporary cultural politics of funeral and body disposal...
Waste in general, and e-waste in particular, has become a topic of interest in recent years. One foc...
This article asks whether the recent UK‐based practice of removing ashes from crematoria has led to ...
It is often through conversations about household objects, jewellery or other items that the very su...
This essay explores the cultural economy of commercial waste. Drawing from ethnographic research wit...
This paper shows how the human corpse can function as an aes- thetic-therapeutic for the deceased, t...
Solid waste disposal is now recognized worldwide as a critical issue that demands immediate attentio...
This thesis engages with the recent innovation in British funerary rites known as ‘natural’ burial t...
This thesis focuses on the complex cultural, social and material factors that combine to hasten the ...
This collection of six articles draws on contributions presented to the international symposium on ...
In current environmental discourse, disposal does not remove and destroy waste but rather transforms...
Since the 19th century, the deceased human body and its parts have been increasingly dehumanized, ob...
In this article, the literary and archaeological evidence for burial practices that can be associ-at...
abstract: This thesis is structured proleptically, in the initial section I introduce the modern fun...
Abstract Methods for preparing and burying the dead vary widely across time and cultures, but an end...
This thesis explores the historical and contemporary cultural politics of funeral and body disposal...
Waste in general, and e-waste in particular, has become a topic of interest in recent years. One foc...
This article asks whether the recent UK‐based practice of removing ashes from crematoria has led to ...
It is often through conversations about household objects, jewellery or other items that the very su...
This essay explores the cultural economy of commercial waste. Drawing from ethnographic research wit...
This paper shows how the human corpse can function as an aes- thetic-therapeutic for the deceased, t...
Solid waste disposal is now recognized worldwide as a critical issue that demands immediate attentio...
This thesis engages with the recent innovation in British funerary rites known as ‘natural’ burial t...