** Apologies for cross-posting **
Dear all,
I am delighted to announce that Being Dead Otherwise by Anne Allison (Professor of Cultural Anthropology, Duke University) has been published from Duke University Press.
Book Description:
With an aging population, declining marriage and childbirth rates, and a rise in single households, more Japanese are living and dying alone. Many dead are no longer buried in traditional ancestral graves where descendants would tend their spirits, and individuals are increasingly taking on mortuary preparation for themselves. In Being Dead Otherwise Anne Allison examines the emergence of new death practices in Japan as the old customs of mortuary care are coming undone. She outlines the proliferation of new industries, services, initiatives, and businesses that offer alternative means—ranging from automated graves, collective grave sites, and crematoria to one-stop mortuary complexes and robotic priests—for tending to the dead. These new burial and ritual practices provide alternatives to long-standing traditions of burial and commemoration of the dead. In charting this shifting ecology of death, Allison outlines the potential of these solutions to radically reorient sociality in Japan in ways that will impact how we think about the end of life, identity, tradition, and culture in Japan and beyond.
Table of Contents:
Prelude ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1
Histories
1. Ambiguous Bones: Dead in the Past 25
2. The Popular Industry of Death: From Godzilla to the Ending Business 47
Preparations
3. Caring (Differently) for the Dead 73
4. Preparedness: A Biopolitics of Making Life Out of Death 99
Departures
5. The Smell of Lonely Death and the Work of Cleaning It Up 123
6. De-parting: The Handling of Remaindered Remains 149
Machines
7. Automated Graves: The Precarity and Prosthetics of Caring for the Dead 173
Epilogue 191
Notes 197
Bibliography 215
Index 231
Duke University Press now offers a 50% discount with the code SPRING23.
Please feel free to circulate this to your colleagues and students!
For further information, please contact Elly Veloria (elly.veloria [at] duke.edu).
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