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Anthropol Med. 2007 Apr;14(1):1-14. doi: 10.1080/13648470601106079.

Of Grief and Well-being: Competing Conceptions of Restorative Ritualization.

Anthropology & medicine

Jenny Hockey, Leonie Kellaher, David Prendergast

PMID: 26873796 DOI: 10.1080/13648470601106079

Abstract

Informants' accounts of what they did with ashes they had chosen to remove from UK crematoria described disposal and memorialization strategies that have implications for anthropological understanding of issues of well-being, and the generation of new ritual practices. Here we aim to explore informants' conceptions of how well-being might be restored after a bereavement and how these were being put into practice. Data were gathered as part of an Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) funded project, which used qualitative interviewing and focus groups among professionals involved with independent ash disposal; and individuals who had removed the ashes of relative or friend from a crematorium. Barking and Dagenham, Nottingham, Sunderland and Glasgow were our field sites. Analysis involved recognizing these data as 'motivated narratives' (Bury 2001 ) that, for example, extended informants' relationships with the dead, as well as reflecting tensions between professionals' imperatives to complete work with a client and their commitment to offering individual choice and support during their ongoing relationship with the dead. Such findings highlight the contested nature of contemporary conceptions of restorative ritual, with tensions existing between the meta-narratives of individual choice and professional expertise; between different individuals' 'choices'; and between the event of a death ritual and the process of ritualization. These findings contribute a nuanced account of the diversity of discursive practices through which the individuals, both 'lay' and professional, involved in a particular death, might understand how well-being can be restored.

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