TY - CHAP
T1 - Complex Worlds, Complex People
T2 - Auto-Ethnographic Sociological Perspectives on Decolonising the Aftermath of Death
AU - Golding, Berenice
AU - Hamilton, Sukhbinder
AU - Ribbens McCarthy, Jane
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 selection and editorial matter, Sharon Mallon and Laura Towers; individual chapters, the contributors.
PY - 2024/11/28
Y1 - 2024/11/28
N2 - In earlier work we raised the need to ‘decolonise bereavement studies’. In this chapter we explore the complexities of what this might mean in terms of lived experiences. We move beyond individualised and psychologised perspectives of ‘bereavement and grief’, to consider the aftermath of death in the continuing lives of the living as deeply relational, experienced in everyday relationships of families and communities. Our sociological lens draws attention to how such lived experiences are situated through institutionalised and racialised patterns of inequality and power. Yet sociology as a discipline ‘hasn’t always addressed the . . . global dimension [of structural inequalities] or the lasting impact of colonialism and empire’ (Bhambra, 2021). By developing a collaborative auto-ethnographic conversational approach, we consider our historically and culturally situated identities as three women of diverse heritage, reflecting on our experiences of how our families and communities ‘do’ death and its aftermath. What emerged are experiences shaped by intergenerational colonial histories, which change over time and generations; experiences shaped by valued cultural and religious heritages, alongside current experiences of racism, inequalities, transnational mobility and rootedness. Taking an intersectional lens, we consider how our legacies and biographies shaped our experiences of the aftermath of death. In the process we sometimes find ourselves surprised by the resonances between our experiences, but also what we learn further about the divergences. In this way, we seek to open nuanced spaces for opening up an enriching scenery in considering ‘bereavement’ landscapes.
AB - In earlier work we raised the need to ‘decolonise bereavement studies’. In this chapter we explore the complexities of what this might mean in terms of lived experiences. We move beyond individualised and psychologised perspectives of ‘bereavement and grief’, to consider the aftermath of death in the continuing lives of the living as deeply relational, experienced in everyday relationships of families and communities. Our sociological lens draws attention to how such lived experiences are situated through institutionalised and racialised patterns of inequality and power. Yet sociology as a discipline ‘hasn’t always addressed the . . . global dimension [of structural inequalities] or the lasting impact of colonialism and empire’ (Bhambra, 2021). By developing a collaborative auto-ethnographic conversational approach, we consider our historically and culturally situated identities as three women of diverse heritage, reflecting on our experiences of how our families and communities ‘do’ death and its aftermath. What emerged are experiences shaped by intergenerational colonial histories, which change over time and generations; experiences shaped by valued cultural and religious heritages, alongside current experiences of racism, inequalities, transnational mobility and rootedness. Taking an intersectional lens, we consider how our legacies and biographies shaped our experiences of the aftermath of death. In the process we sometimes find ourselves surprised by the resonances between our experiences, but also what we learn further about the divergences. In this way, we seek to open nuanced spaces for opening up an enriching scenery in considering ‘bereavement’ landscapes.
KW - Collaborative Auto-ethnographies
KW - Belonging
KW - Colonial histories
KW - Decolonising
KW - Diversify
KW - Death
KW - Grief
UR - https://www.routledge.com/Death-Dying-and-Bereavement-New-Sociological-Perspectives/Mallon-Towers/p/book/9781032453491
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85212021346&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.4324/9781003376569-16
DO - 10.4324/9781003376569-16
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9781032453491
T3 - Routledge Sociological Futures Series
SP - 159
EP - 171
BT - Death, Dying and Bereavement
A2 - Mallon, Sharon
A2 - Towers, Laura
PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group
ER -