Huge changes have occurred in both the physical facts of death and in the cultural modes that guide our reactions to it. These changes also affect policy issues ranging from punishments for crimes to birth control to the conduct of war. This book explores the impacts of these changes upon both personal experience and social policy and places developments in the United States in an international comparative context.\ The book opens with an overview of traditional patterns of death and related...
Huge changes have occurred in both the physical facts of death and in the cultural modes that guide our reactions to it. These changes also affect policy issues ranging from punishments for crimes to birth control to the conduct of war. This book explores the impacts of these changes upon both personal experience and social policy and places developments in the United States in an international comparative context.The book opens with an overview of traditional patterns of death and related cultural practices in agricultural civilizations, along with changes brought by Christianity. Attitudes and practices in colonial America are traced and compared to other societies. After setting this historical context, the book examines the immense changes that occurred in the nineteenth century: new cultural reactions to death, expressed in changing death rituals and cemetery design; the unprecedented reduction later in the century of infant mortality; the relocation of death from home to hospital; the redefinition of death as a taboo subject. The book’s final segment relates changes in death culture and experience to the contentious debates of the twentieth century over the death penalty, abortion, and the practice of war. The book is designed to use historical and comparative perspectives to stimulate debate about the strengths and weaknesses of cultural practices and policies related to death.
Acknowledgments ixSeries Preface xiIntroduction: Why Death? Why the United States? 1Traditional Patterns of Death 7New Emotions and Rituals in Death: The United States and Western Society 31The Administration of Death in the Nineteenth Century 59The Death Revolution in Western Society and Its Global Implications 79Death as Taboo: The American Case 89The Comparative Context: Global Patterns of Change 117From Personal Death to Social Policies 129Abortion Disputes and Contemporary Death Culture 137The Death Penalty and Its Enemies: New Global Divisions 149Contemporary War and Contemporary Death 165Conclusion 185Suggestions for Further Reading 191Index 195About the Author 201
\ From the Publisher“Peter N. Stearns, one of our nation’s most gifted historians, offers us in Revolutions in Sorrow a profound essay on the history of death. Going beyond trends in the United States, Stearns explores experiences and practices in a global context. Going beyond individual-level data, Revolutions in Sorrow touches on the collective histories of abortion, capital punishment, and war. As he has done so often in the past, Stearns invites us to consider a major topic in social history in fresh ways.”\ \