Mira Menzfeld explores dying persons' experiences of their own dying processes. She reveals cultural specificities of pre-exital dying in contemporary Germany, paying special attention to how concepts of dying '(un)well' are perceived and realized by dying persons. Her methodological focus centers on classical ethnographic approaches: Close participant observation as well as informal and semi-structured conversations. For a better understanding of the specificities of dying in contemporary Germany, the author provides a refined definition catalogue of adequate terms to describe dying from an anthropological perspective.
Contents
- First Experiences as a Dying Person
- Cultural Models of Dying
- How it Feels to Be a Dying Person
- Dying as Liminality in the Making
- Insights from and for Dying
Target Groups
- Researchers and students in the fields of ethnology, medicine, psychology, theology, sociology
- Nurses, physicians, personnel in hospices, priests, psychologists
The Author
Mira Menzfeld worked as a cultural anthropologist, journalist, and advertising editor. She is currently researching Salafits in Europe and voluntarily attending dying persons.
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