Despite the wide variety of events studied or addressed by event
scholars and event managers, very few consider death from a perspective of
event studies or event management. Yet, it is the one event that none of us can
evade. How death is articulated through the events around it, how the end of
life is marked (whether that be the life of an individual, a group, or a
community) through evental structures in diverse cultural, ideological,
societal frameworks, is a vastly under-explored domain.
From the practicalities
around a highly stage-managed event of commemoration or memorialisation, in the
details of state funeral or day of remembrance, to the sudden outpourings of
grief and unstructured informal societal responses to some events of death
around well-known figures, the loss of someone personally close to us or our
responses shed light on culturally normative modes of expression, hegemonic
power, or an ideological context within which the death occurs and the living
act and interact.
Following on from a positive discussion with one of the editorial board
of the Emerald Studies in Death and Culture book series we are looking for
chapters that would contribute to a proposed book on death, remembrance,
memorialisation and the evental. We seek contributors from any discipline and
field who are interested in reflecting on death from the perspective of event,
event studies, and events management. The work can be conceptual, empirical,
practical or provocative.
Whether you are a practitioner or your area of
expertise is anthropology, critical event studies, cultural studies,
philosophy, psychology, sociology, theology or otherwise, so long as your
interest is in the manifestation, mediation and articulation of death from an
events perspective, we would love to hear from you. There are no restrictions
around conceptual framework, or on the research philosophy/research approach,
your work adopts.
Chapters may cover, but not be limited to:
- Celebrating, commemorating and memorialising death through events
- Funerals and memorial services
- Funeral directors as event manager and co-creators of funeral events
- National or international commemorations of death
- Deaths of celebrities, royalty, religious or political leaders or iconic figures
- Formal state responses to death
- Media influences on death
- Commercialization of death
- Cultural significance of death memorials
- Vigils and responses to terror attacks
- Faith and non-faith perspectives
- Informal spontaneous evental responses to death
- Cultural appropriation of death events
- Teaching about events of death
- Conspicuous consumption and death
- Sustainability and woodland burials
- Visual media, social media and memorabilia, live streaming of death events
- (Auto)Ethnographic stories of death events
- Memorialisation as activist event
- Theological perspectives on death events
- A contemporary conceptualization of the funeral as event
- Rituals of death events
- Death events as liminal spaces
In the first instance please send us an abstract of 300 words (excluding
any references), together with your full name, any affiliation, and lead author
contact information 19th July 2019. Our objective is to submit a formal book
proposal by the end of July 2019.
Dr Ian R Lamond: i.lamond@leedsbeckett.ac.uk
Rev. Ruth Dowson: r.dowson@leedsbeckett.ac.uk
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