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UID:news362@ethnologie.philhist.unibas.ch
DTSTAMP;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20240911T113346
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20241002T161500
SUMMARY:Denaturalizing death
DESCRIPTION:Much has been written about the naturalization of death through
  modernity\, though largely not from a critical perspective. The paper wil
 l first take up the question of natural death as a cultural category with 
 political uses and social functions has rarely been broached. Using some w
 ork with death doulas and political organizers in the United States\, espe
 cially in reaction to the pandemic\, climate change and racial justice\, t
 he paper will argue that we have entered an era where death has become den
 aturalized
X-ALT-DESC:<p>Much has been written about the naturalization of death throu
 gh modernity\, though largely not from a critical perspective. The paper w
 ill first take up the question of natural death as a cultural category wit
 h political uses and social functions has rarely been broached. Using some
  work with death doulas and political organizers in the United States\, es
 pecially in reaction to the pandemic\, climate change and racial justice\,
  the paper will argue that we have entered an era where death has become d
 enaturalized</p>
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Zurich:20241002T181700
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