This paper explores how transformations in the domestic geopolitics of burial space has produced new logics in respect of property, security and capacity as forms of volumetric and material governance. Focusing on the everyday practices of municipal burial space during the late 19th century in England, this paper builds on feminist political economy approaches to interrogate the emergence of volumetric securitization through transformations in the material politics of burial across a changing socio-technical environment. The volumetric geopolitics of burial shows how embodied experiences and practices of interment illuminate specific class-based death cultures and economies through intimate and affective ecologies of governance. Drawing on ...
The case of the funeral market offers privileged insights into the way market devices closely link p...
Since the Middle Ages the Church has had dominion over the dead, and so it would be fair to assume t...
This book explores how Victorian cemeteries were the direct result of the socio-cultural, economic a...
Building on embodied and de‐colonial approaches to geopolitics, this paper examines the relationship...
Between 1801 and 1871 the population of England grew at an unprecedented rate. This increase in popu...
Building on embodied and de-colonial approaches to geopolitics, this paper examines the relationship...
This book looks at sovereignty as a particular form of power and politics. It shows that the fate of...
This thesis explores the historical and contemporary cultural politics of funeral and body disposal...
In the context of the administration of spaces assigned by municipalities for the burial of the dead...
Building on embodied and de‐colonial approaches to geopolitics, this paper examines the relationship...
This doctoral thesis examines the encounter between the dead and the living within 19th and 20th cen...
In the context of the administration of spaces assigned by municipalities for the burial of the dead...
Early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are well-known because of their rich grave goods, but this wealth can o...
Living with Dying: Everyday Cultures of Dying within Family Life in Britain, c.1900s-1950s' is a maj...
This dissertation concerns the politics, aesthetics, and meanings of the British dead around the wor...
The case of the funeral market offers privileged insights into the way market devices closely link p...
Since the Middle Ages the Church has had dominion over the dead, and so it would be fair to assume t...
This book explores how Victorian cemeteries were the direct result of the socio-cultural, economic a...
Building on embodied and de‐colonial approaches to geopolitics, this paper examines the relationship...
Between 1801 and 1871 the population of England grew at an unprecedented rate. This increase in popu...
Building on embodied and de-colonial approaches to geopolitics, this paper examines the relationship...
This book looks at sovereignty as a particular form of power and politics. It shows that the fate of...
This thesis explores the historical and contemporary cultural politics of funeral and body disposal...
In the context of the administration of spaces assigned by municipalities for the burial of the dead...
Building on embodied and de‐colonial approaches to geopolitics, this paper examines the relationship...
This doctoral thesis examines the encounter between the dead and the living within 19th and 20th cen...
In the context of the administration of spaces assigned by municipalities for the burial of the dead...
Early Anglo-Saxon cemeteries are well-known because of their rich grave goods, but this wealth can o...
Living with Dying: Everyday Cultures of Dying within Family Life in Britain, c.1900s-1950s' is a maj...
This dissertation concerns the politics, aesthetics, and meanings of the British dead around the wor...
The case of the funeral market offers privileged insights into the way market devices closely link p...
Since the Middle Ages the Church has had dominion over the dead, and so it would be fair to assume t...
This book explores how Victorian cemeteries were the direct result of the socio-cultural, economic a...