1st Edition

Creative and Aesthetic Ways of Grief "All Things Reimagined"

252 Pages 68 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

252 Pages 68 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Inspired by the grief of Australian musician Nick Cave, this edited anthology presents a host of creative and aesthetic ways of living with grief. In doing so, it challenges persistent attempts to homogenise grief and frame it as a solely negative and barren state from which the bereaved must expediently escape. Across 11 chapters, each an account of lived grief by multi-disciplinary academics,... Read more
Introduction
Mórna O’Connor and Dorthe Refslund Christensen
Part I The role of Community in Fostering Creative and Aesthetic Griefways
1 “Here Now, Sitting Alone”: Loss, Ghosteens and Trashspeak in a Wounded Place
Martin Demant Frederiksen
2 “Our Days of Gold”: A Performative Approach to Mourning and the Reanimation of a Photographic Archive on Social Media
Assunta Ruocco
3 Creative Grief Practices: (Dis)connections and Resonance in Online Grief Spaces
Ester Holte Kofod
4 “We now belong to each other for the rest of our lives”: Ways of Grief in an Extended Community of Mourners
Ellen Kristvik
Part II DIY and Vernacular Creative Griefways
5 Improvising a Forest Practice: Encounters with a Miraculous Materiality
Josh Wagner
6 Narrating Nabber: The Creativity of Posthumously Storying Complex People
Mórna O’Connor
7 “Mapping Love and Loss”
Sandra Adams
8 Funerals as Creative Spaces to Grieve and Remember
Rosalie Kuyvenhoven
Part III The Aesthetics of Potentiality, Dialogue and Openness in Grief
9 A Place of Potentiality: Finding New Forms of Dialogue in Grief through Creativity
Jayne Wallace
10 Gifts from Beyond the Grave: Exploring Imagination and Creativity in Grief through Relationality and Exchange
Miranda Tuckett
11 Leaving Yourself Open: Ritualisations of Resonance in Grief
Dorthe Refslund Christensen

Biography

Mórna O’Connor, PhD, is a grief scholar specialising in digital-age grieving. Mórna’s work examines how grief is conceptualised, constructed and commodified in contemporary digital environments.

Dorthe Refslund Christensen, PhD, is a grief scholar with an (auto) ethnographically based focus on ritualisations of death and loss and the embeddedness of individuals’ grief repertoires in everyday life. Her work is both empirical and conceptual.

"This anthology showcases many creative endeavors and rituals to create meaning and posthumous storied connections. While the book is filled with anthropological wisdom, readers will discover heartfelt, moving accounts throughout affirming how grief charts new pathways that stand against the Western misperceptions that relationships end at death."

Lorraine Hedtke, MSW, ACSW, PhD, professor of counseling, California State University, San Bernardino, USA, and co-author (along with J. Winslade), of The Crafting of Grief

"This book is a fascinating collection of stories, observations and reflections from the space where grief leaves us searching for new ways to understand our changed world: where we must learn anew 'how to be.' Bringing together ethnography, creativity, and reflection on using our senses when words fail us, the authors have crafted a rich and intriguing invitation to look, listen and live differently."

Kathryn Mannix, author, end-of-life-care campaigner and retired palliative physician, Northumberland, UK

"This beautifully crafted collection of multi-disciplinary, creative workings challenges the reader to reimagine grief and to embrace the creative possibilities it affords. Each story is carefully and sensitively told, through words and imagery, resulting in accounts that are intellectually stimulating, emotionally engaging, uplifting, and life affirming."

Gayle Letherby, visiting professor, Plymouth, Greenwich, Bath, UK