Berghahn Books
Mirrors of Passing
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Edited by:
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About this book
Without exception, all people are faced with the inevitability of death, a stark fact that has immeasurably shaped societies and individual consciousness for the whole of human history. Mirrors of Passing offers a powerful window into this oldest of human preoccupations by investigating the interrelationships of death, materiality, and temporality across far-flung times and places. Stretching as far back as Ancient Egypt and Greece and moving through present-day locales as diverse as Western Europe, Central Asia, and the Arctic, each of the richly illustrated essays collected here draw on a range of disciplinary insights to explore some of the most fundamental, universal questions that confront us.
Author / Editor information
Sophie Seebach holds a doctorate from Aarhus University. Her recent publications include pieces in the edited collection Mortuary Rites, Memory, and Authority/Agency: The Anthropology of Death in the Early Twenty-First Century (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017) and, with Lotte Meinert and Rane Willerslev, in the journal Africa.
--- Contributor: Rane WillerslevRane Willerslev holds a doctorate from the University of Cambridge. His numerous books and publications include On the Run in Siberia (University of Minnesota Press, 2012), Taming Time, Timing Death: Social Technologies and Ritual (edited with Dorthe R. Christensen, Ashgate, 2013), and Transcultural Montage (edited with Christian Suhr, Berghahn, 2013).
Reviews
“In Mirrors of Passing, Seebach and Willerslev have successfully revealed novel ways of approaching death from the perspectives of time, materiality and the social role of the dead. While, as they admit, no final concluding statement about the relationships between death, materiality and time appear possible, this edited collection does not require one. The value of this text comes not from any one particular statement, but from the range of perspectives it offers and what these perspectives can themselves offer those persons wishing to understand death beyond the assumptions about it that are hidden in modern life. This volume is highly relevant for anyone interested in cultural anthropology, social anthropology, museum studies, religious studies or sociological studies of death.” • JASO
“This volume is especially relevant for scholars and students concerned with the ethical role of museums as caretakers of our religious material and physical (human) remains as well as for those interested in broader questions of how death, time, and materiality impact human conceptions of spirit and place. Its value for scholars of religious studies lies in its non-Western focus, as it provides—in one volume—a significant contribution to the scholarship on death and conceptions of the afterlife from contemporary indigenous cultures around the world.” • Reading Religion
“Ambitious and engaging, the essays in this volume demonstrate how diverse conceptions of time, in relation to death, are present across history, geography, and media. Beginning with the first chapter’s enchanting examination of a James Joyce story, and continuing through the various ethnographies, the contributors have provided us with new ways of engaging with some familiar themes.” • Barbara Graham, author of Death, Materiality, and Mediation: An Ethnography of Remembrance in Ireland
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Illustrations
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Introduction. Mirrors of Passing
1 - Part I. Death’s Time
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Chapter 1. The Time of the Dead: Anthropology, Literature, and the Virtual Past
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Chapter 2. Orpheus in Love, Death, and Time
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Chapter 3. Death before Time: Mythical Time in Ancient Egyptian Mortuary Religion
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Chapter 4. When Bad Places Turn Worse: The Necropolitics of Death Sites in Northern KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa
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Chapter 5. Narratives of Ebola: Temporal and Material Changes of Social Riverscapes
90 - Part II. Materialities of Death
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Chapter 6. “Saving the Dead”: Fighting for Life in the Siberian North
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Chapter 7. Death, Rebirth, Objects, and Time in North American Traditional Inuit Societies: An Overview
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Chapter 8. Transforming and Creating Multiple Worlds: Strange Attractors in the Mongolian Landscape
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Chapter 9. The Dead among the Living: Materiality and Time in Rethinking Death and Otherness in Lowland South America
166 - Part III. Life after Death
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Chapter 10. Making Presence: Time Work and Narratives in Bereaved Parents’ Online Grief Work
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Chapter 11. The Multiple Identities of Aslak Hætta and Mons Somby: The Case of the Sámi Skulls
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Chapter 12. Media, Ritual, and Immortality: The Case of a Masculine Hero
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Chapter 13. The Temporality and Materiality of Life and Death in a Sepik Village
233 - Part IV. Exhibiting Death, Materiality, and Time
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Chapter 14. The Wonderful Exhibition That Almost Was
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Index
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