Overview
- Presents the first sustained sociological analysis of death cafes, a growing phenomenon across the world
- Employs a range of sociological theories that are notable for their usual absence in death studies
- Based on extensive research from over 2 years spent observing death cafe meetings
- Aptly places 'talk' at the center of the analysis
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Table of contents (7 chapters)
Reviews
“This is an interesting book, offering a theoretical approach to the death café movement that requires further exploration.” (Glenys Caswell, Mortality, Vol. 24 (3), 2019)
“This work takes readers on a remarkable journey across the terrain of social responses to mortality through the distinctive Death Cafe movement. It demonstrates how the movement confronts core challenges of mortality, as well as the deleterious grip that the market, medicine, and media arms have on our thinking about death and life. Through Jack Fong's incisive ethnography, a major step forward in the development of a 21st century humanistic social science is illuminated.” (Dr. John Brown Childs, Professor of Sociology, Emeritus, at the University of California, Santa Cruz and author of Transcommunality: From the Politics of Conversion to the Ethics of Respect)“For many, the prospect of death and dying in post-industrial society is as terrifying as it is isolating. Employing Habermas, Fromm, and Wolf, Jack Fong's analyses illuminates how the media, medicine, and market sanitizes the subjectivity of dying, and how the Death Cafe movement is responding by inspiring itsmembers to reimagine and reclaim what it means to be mortal. Fong's nuanced, timely, and empathetic sociological study is of the highest, most urgent order.” (Dr. Kevin McCaffree, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne and author of The Secular Landscape: The Decline of Religion in America)
“Fong views the death café movement as a social movement which involves communities around the world. He argues that, in this role, the death café simultaneously acts as a critique of contemporary risk society and a celebration of the ability to transcend risk society. Through communicative action, participants in the death café, largely strangers to each other, bridge the gap between fear and acceptance of their own dying. In doing so, they are sometimes able to generate a degree of ontological security which enables them to feel secure in their worlds. This is an interesting book, offering a theoretical approach to the death café movement that requires further exploration.” (Dr. Glenys Caswell, Mortality, Vol. 24 (3), 2019; University of Nottingham) “Fong published The Death Café Movement: Exploring the Horizons of Mortality, the first such work on the topic. In researching the book he attended seven three-hour-long Death Cafés. During discussions Fong focused on spotting recurring themes and observing how participants interacted with one another. Much of the book is a critique of modernity's relationship with death...the "trinity of the market, media, and medicine," the key outlets through which polite societies acknowledge death. Such institutions, Fong writes, serve more to terrify and keep us in the dark than nurture acceptance, understanding or comfort.” (Brent Crane, Folks: A Pillpack Magazine, December 5, 2017)“Partly as a nod to the ‘death café’ movement (Fong, 2017; Miles and Corr, 2017), partly because I enjoy the small, simple rituals of hosting people, and partly because of my assumption that the cemetery space would need an added element of comfort in order to make the meetings successful, I decided that all the meetings would feature café-like table settings, hot beverages, and snacks such as homemade baked goods, fruit, crackers, or squares of dark chocolate. From a utilitarian standpoint...these hosting efforts felt important as a way of creating a welcoming and cozy atmosphere, as a way of encouraging embodied learning, and as a signal that the Cemetery Café was worthy of some fuss.” (Matthew Bailey-Dick, in Pedagogy of the Deceased: The Cemetery as a Classroom for Community Development and Hope, doctoral thesis submitted to the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, University of Toronto)
“Jack Fong, an American sociologist who gathered regularly at Death Cafe events to collect data, ended up defining the phenomenon as a social movement whose participants, in our age of individuality, are inspired by death when talking about living a more rewarding life, and thus became aware of the potential of a good death while building a community in the process.” (Milja Vaipuro and Leena Voutilainen, in "Puhutaan kuolemasta: Käsittelyssä kuolemanpelko, menetelmänä Death Cafe" ("Let's talk about death: Dealing with the fear of death as a method of the Death Cafe"), 2019 Education Programme thesis on elder care submitted to Metropolia University of Applied Sciences, Finland)
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Bibliographic Information
Book Title: The Death Café Movement
Book Subtitle: Exploring the Horizons of Mortality
Authors: Jack Fong
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-54256-0
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan Cham
eBook Packages: Social Sciences, Social Sciences (R0)
Copyright Information: The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2017
Hardcover ISBN: 978-3-319-54255-3Published: 09 August 2017
Softcover ISBN: 978-3-319-85353-6Published: 03 August 2018
eBook ISBN: 978-3-319-54256-0Published: 31 July 2017
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XXIII, 284
Number of Illustrations: 59 b/w illustrations
Topics: Cultural Studies, Sociological Theory, Social Theory, Medical Sociology, Sociology of the Body