Section |
Title |
Author |
Published |
Editorial
|
|
Dead in the Field: Utilizing Fieldwork to Explore the Historical Interpreting of Death Related Activity, and the Emotional Coping with Death |
Christina Welch |
Jan 24, 2012 |
Articles
|
|
For Prayers and Pedagogy: Contextualising English Carved Cadaver Monuments of the Late-Medieval Social and Religious Elite |
Christina Welch |
Jan 24, 2012 |
|
Cross Bones Graveyard: Honouring the Outcast |
Adrian Harris |
Jan 24, 2012 |
|
The Unclean Truth: Death at the London Metropolitan Police’s Crime Museum |
Lucy Talbot |
Jan 24, 2012 |
|
A Grave Look at History: The Australian Perspective |
Catherine Brew |
Jan 24, 2012 |
|
God: Buried in the Rubble |
Irene Davies |
Jan 24, 2012 |
|
The Context of Transcendent and Immanent use of Humour: How Workers in Crematoria and Cemeteries in the UK are Coping with Death, Funerals and Second Hand Grief |
Angie McLachlan |
Jan 24, 2012 |
|
“Our Dead are the Ultimate Teachers of Life”. The Corpse as an Inter-mediator of Transcendence: Spirituality in the German Funeral Market |
Antje Kahl |
Jan 24, 2012 |
|
Dying your own way? A comparative approach to Mortality as a religious identity marker in British Islam and British Judaism |
Marta Dominguez Diaz |
Jan 24, 2012 |