Cultural History of Death in the Age of Enlightenment

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bio-power foucault death studies
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deathbed rituals enlightenment
decline of purgatory belief
demographic transition eighteenth century
eighteenth century mortality
enlightenment
enlightenment critique of afterlife
enlightenment death culture
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eq_history
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eq_society-politics
forensic medicine
miasma theory public health
old regime burial practices
paris cemetery reform
premature burial
secularisation of burial
sentimental death narratives
voltaire death controversy

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472537539
  • Weight: 616g
  • Dimensions: 170 x 244mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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When the field of death studies emerged in the mid 1970s, the Age of Enlightenment was identified as a major turning point. The pioneers in the field traced back to the late eighteenth century the principal themes characteristic of death in modernity—medicalization, de-Christianization, privatization, sentimentality, avoidance, the growing physical separation between the living and the dead, and the actual decline in mortality during peacetime. Fifty years on, those themes still shape the research agenda, but the direction of historical change seems less clearcut.

Reflecting the new perspectives of recent scholarship, this volume explores the ambiguities and contradictions in Enlightenment cultures of death while expanding the focus to include Jewish as well as Christian communities and emphasizing gender as a category of analysis. The topics range from attitudes toward death among Enlightenment intellectuals and the placement and design of cemeteries to the origins of demography as a field of study, the practice of autopsying in forensic medicine, the decriminalization of suicide, the role of print in Jewish death culture, the invention of the vampire, and the symbolism of the corpse in the French Revolution. The contributors are attentive to the reversibility and mutability of historical trends. Growing repugnance at the odor and sight of decomposing flesh was accompanied by macabre fascination with putridity and mortal remains. The Enlightenment project to liberate humanity from the irrational fear of postmortem punishment produced new fears of death that were all the more powerful for being grounded in scientific reason.

A Cultural History of Death is part of The Cultural Histories Series. Titles are available as hardcover sets for libraries as a tangible reference copy or as part of a digital library. The digital product is available to institutions by annual subscription or on perpetual access, individual volumes are available in print or digitally.

Jeffrey Freedman is Professor of History at Yeshiva University, USA.