American Afterlife - Kate Sweeney - [PDF][N27]

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Description


American Afterlife: Encounters in the Customs of Mourning

by

Kate Sweeney

Language: English | Format: PDF | ISBN-10: 0820346004 | ISBN-13: 978-0820346007

Page count: 232 | Date Published: March 15, 2014 | Publisher: University of Georgia Press


Politics & Social Sciences, Sociology, Death

CONTENTS

COVER

CONTENTS

PREFACE

CHAPTER 1 American Ways of Death

CHAPTER 2 Gone, but Not Forgotten
DISMAL TRADE: Sarah Peacock, Memorial Tattoo Artist: Under the Skin

CHAPTER 3 The Cemetery’s Cemetery
DISMAL TRADE: Kay Powell, Obituary Writer: The Doyenne Speaks

CHAPTER 4 The Last Great Obit Writers’ Conference

CHAPTER 5 Give Me That Old-Time Green Burial
DISMAL TRADE: Oana Hogrefe, Memorial Photographer Memory Maker

CHAPTER 6 The House Where Death Lives
DISMAL TRADE: Lenette Hall, Owner, The Urngarden: The Business at the Back of the Closet

CHAPTER 7 With the Fishes
DISMAL TRADE: Anne Gordon, Funeral Chaplain: Funerals Are Fun

CHAPTER 8 Death by the Roadside

AFTERWORD

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

NOTES

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Excerpt:
American Ways of Death

Jon Austin had been working as founding curator at the Museum of Funeral Customs for about a year when he had a curious visitor. His office door is always open to the lobby, so he could observe her as she neared the exit. “Thanks for visiting!” he called.

She was an elderly woman, probably in her late seventies or early eighties, and she nodded in his direction as she passed the antique carriage hearse on her way out. But then she stopped and stood completely still for a moment before turning around and returning to his office doorway.

“You didn’t tell all of the story,” she said.

When recounting this, Jon Austin re-creates his own confused expression: He wanted to be polite, but at the same time, he had worked hard for months to get the museum’s collection of American death memorabilia just right, and so, “there’s kind of this bravado in me,” he says. He asked her, “What exactly have we failed to include?”

She paused and then said, “You haven’t explained what they do with the rest of the body.”

And Jon Austin thought Rest . . . ? But what he said was, “I’m sorry. But I can’t understand your question. Can you help me? Give me more information?”
She repeated it. “You haven’t explained what they do with the rest of the body.”
After one more confused exchange, she told him what she meant. When she was a child, a grown-up had told her that what you see in the casket is all that’s present. “That’s why they only open the upper end of the casket. Because that’s all that’s there.” And now, this octogenarian asked, “What do they do with the rest of the body?”

Jon Austin’s chief joy in life sprang from putting together picture- perfect exhibits like those here: the 1930s embalming room display with its gleaming metal table, the early twentieth-century home- funeral display with its chrome-plated art deco casket jacks and dark velvet curtains. These opportunities to delve into and re-create his- tory had driven him to pursue a career as a museum director and curator. He had not anticipated ever being faced with counselling a stranger about her personal experiences with funerals and death.

He stumbled and stammered out an explanation, offering to put her in contact with a number of funeral directors, friends of his who would support his assertion that human bodies are not cut in half before being buried.

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