Modernity, Mortality and Re-Enchantment: The Death Taboo Revisited
The death taboo has been depicted as modernity's burial of the question of human mortality. Death is prejudged as a 'pornographic' event that should be veiled. Critics argue that this taboo has been exaggerated and the sequestration of death reflects a crisis of meaning in modernity....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Sociology (Oxford) 2008-08, Vol.42 (4), p.745-759 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The death taboo has been depicted as modernity's burial of the question of human mortality. Death is prejudged as a 'pornographic' event that should be veiled. Critics argue that this taboo has been exaggerated and the sequestration of death reflects a crisis of meaning in modernity. However, sources of re-enchantment in modernity have continually undermined the death taboo by keeping alive the meaning of transcendence. New Age redefinition of death as spiritual transition and representation of near-death experiences as affirmation of the afterlife have revived the quest for transcendence over the silence perpetrated by the taboo. As part of the quest for transcendence, re-enchantment emasculates death as a foe in order to redefine it as a vehicle of emancipation. |
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ISSN: | 0038-0385 1469-8684 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0038038508091626 |