Last rites The evolution of the American funeral

Todd Harra

Book - 2022

"A fascinating and oft-surprising exploration of the history and meaning of funeral rituals"--

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Subjects
Published
Boulder, Colorado : Sounds True 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Todd Harra (author)
Physical Description
vii, 277 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781683648055
  • The Dark Arts: An Introduction
  • Chapter 1. A Seismic Shift: Lincoln and the New Sanitary Science
  • Chapter 2. The Book of the Dead
  • Chapter 3. Lethal Combat and Other Roman Obsequies
  • Chapter 4. The Bloody Barber-Surgeons: Embalming Emerges from the Dark Ages
  • Chapter 5. Mourning Gloves and Liquor: Early American Burial Practices
  • Chapter 6. Embalming Surgeons
  • Chapter 7. Gone to Their Sleep: Victorian Sensibilities
  • Chapter 8. Resurrectionists: Advent of the Burial Vault
  • Chapter 9. Vessels of the Dead: Coffins, Caskets, and the Hysteria Surrounding Grave Alarms
  • Chapter 10. The Temple of Honor: Vehicles of the Dead
  • Chapter 11. Mourning the Great War
  • Chapter 12. Flame Burial
  • Chapter 13. Mushroom Suits and the Future (of Funeral Service)
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Booklist Review

Death and all its arrangements may not be the breeziest topic to spend a few hundred pages with, but Harra, himself a funeral director, manages an enlightening and passionate history of how we have come to bury and honor our departed. Each chapter here focuses on a specific era, ranging from ancient Egypt and Rome through Victorian England before moving stateside. Harra delineates how many facets of the modern American funeral traditions have come to be. He even touches on issues like the fear of premature burial, a somewhat common concern across history, which ultimately led to the practice of open-casket funeral viewings where mourners could literally confirm death. The book includes many other surprising anecdotes, from the issue of grave-robbing doctors always in need of test cadavers to Lincoln's introduction of embalming to the masses. A unique historical survey that shows even death is not immune to change.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

For readers with a taste for the quirky or the macabre, Harra, a writer and funeral professional, explores the hows and whys of American funerals, including changing influences from religion, war, high-profile deaths, the ancient world, and more. Rather than presenting these evolutions linearly, each chapter is dedicated to a topic, such as burial vaults and embalming, and relevantly bounces around time periods. This allows the casual reader to enjoy each chapter independently. There's plenty of trivia to be had along the way, including why it's called a living room, the difference between a casket and a coffin, and just why would someone want to put a live grenade in a grave? A chapter on newer funerary trends and thorough notes add to the work's usefulness, though it does lack a bibliography for further reading. VERDICT This is a swell companion piece for fans of Mary Roach's Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers, but libraries should also consider it a source of serious information for those who may be facing difficult end-of-life decisions.--Jack Phoenix

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