"Death Becomes Them". A Funeral Home Ethnography

Drawing on theoretical frameworks from Religious Studies, Anthropology and Sociology, this dissertation poses the question: How is religious meaning constructed in the face of death in contemporary North America, given that commercial establishments, non-denominational funeral chapels, have become t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jackson, Kathy F.
Other Authors: Badone, Ellen E.F., Religious Studies
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17339
id ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/17339
record_format openpolar
spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/17339 2023-05-15T17:22:45+02:00 "Death Becomes Them". A Funeral Home Ethnography Jackson, Kathy F. Badone, Ellen E.F. Religious Studies 2009-04 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17339 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17339 religion religious non-denominational funeral chapels death ritual Thesis 2009 ftmcmaster 2022-03-22T21:13:01Z Drawing on theoretical frameworks from Religious Studies, Anthropology and Sociology, this dissertation poses the question: How is religious meaning constructed in the face of death in contemporary North America, given that commercial establishments, non-denominational funeral chapels, have become the primary context for the performance of death rituals dealing with death, the dead and the bereaved? The dissertation is based on an extended period of ethnographic research at the Marlatt Funeral Home in Dundas, Ontario, a corporately owned non-denominational funeral home which serves a very diverse, but predominantly urban religious population. I concentrate on the funeral professionals as well as clergy and the bereaved in their contribution to the cultural construction and social organization of death in contemporary North America. While there is an extensive body of social science literature on death and funerary practices in non-Western contexts, there is very little systematic academic research on death and funeral practices in contemporary North America, in particular, in Canadian settings. My dissertation furthers the discussion started in studies by Emke (2001) and Small ( 1997) which focus on funeral practices in Newfoundland as well as studies by Bradbury (1999), Davies (2002), Howarth (1996) and Walter (1990, 1994, 1996, 1998) elsewhere in the Anglophone West by focusing on funeral practises in an urban Canadian setting This dissertation demonstrates that funeral directors perform a complicated role as mediators and ritual specialists balancing multiple domains of spirituality, emotion, personal taste, institutionalized religion, ethnicity and commerce. Furthermore, I argue that funeral directors mediate between the living and the dead, between life and death, and between this world and the afterlife, as it is conceived of by their clients. Thesis Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Thesis Newfoundland MacSphere (McMaster University)
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language English
topic religion
religious
non-denominational funeral chapels
death
ritual
spellingShingle religion
religious
non-denominational funeral chapels
death
ritual
Jackson, Kathy F.
"Death Becomes Them". A Funeral Home Ethnography
topic_facet religion
religious
non-denominational funeral chapels
death
ritual
description Drawing on theoretical frameworks from Religious Studies, Anthropology and Sociology, this dissertation poses the question: How is religious meaning constructed in the face of death in contemporary North America, given that commercial establishments, non-denominational funeral chapels, have become the primary context for the performance of death rituals dealing with death, the dead and the bereaved? The dissertation is based on an extended period of ethnographic research at the Marlatt Funeral Home in Dundas, Ontario, a corporately owned non-denominational funeral home which serves a very diverse, but predominantly urban religious population. I concentrate on the funeral professionals as well as clergy and the bereaved in their contribution to the cultural construction and social organization of death in contemporary North America. While there is an extensive body of social science literature on death and funerary practices in non-Western contexts, there is very little systematic academic research on death and funeral practices in contemporary North America, in particular, in Canadian settings. My dissertation furthers the discussion started in studies by Emke (2001) and Small ( 1997) which focus on funeral practices in Newfoundland as well as studies by Bradbury (1999), Davies (2002), Howarth (1996) and Walter (1990, 1994, 1996, 1998) elsewhere in the Anglophone West by focusing on funeral practises in an urban Canadian setting This dissertation demonstrates that funeral directors perform a complicated role as mediators and ritual specialists balancing multiple domains of spirituality, emotion, personal taste, institutionalized religion, ethnicity and commerce. Furthermore, I argue that funeral directors mediate between the living and the dead, between life and death, and between this world and the afterlife, as it is conceived of by their clients. Thesis Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
author2 Badone, Ellen E.F.
Religious Studies
format Thesis
author Jackson, Kathy F.
author_facet Jackson, Kathy F.
author_sort Jackson, Kathy F.
title "Death Becomes Them". A Funeral Home Ethnography
title_short "Death Becomes Them". A Funeral Home Ethnography
title_full "Death Becomes Them". A Funeral Home Ethnography
title_fullStr "Death Becomes Them". A Funeral Home Ethnography
title_full_unstemmed "Death Becomes Them". A Funeral Home Ethnography
title_sort "death becomes them". a funeral home ethnography
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17339
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11375/17339
_version_ 1766109579967463424