Selaus nimekkeen mukaan kokoelmassa
Viitteet 6-10 / 10
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Forest burials in Denmark. Nature, non-religion and spirituality
(The Donner Institute, 08.03.2023)Burial in the forest is a recent, non-confessional alternative to the established cemeteries owned and run by the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Denmark. Danish forest burials fulfil common criteria for non-religion and ... -
‘It is the greenness, the nature, it looks as if someone has taken care of the place very well’. Experiences from St Eskil cemetery in Sweden
(The Donner Institute, 08.03.2023)This article is about experiences of a cemetery landscape: a physical space that was chosen as a depository for human remains, and where different memorial and disposal practices have developed behavioural patterns that ... -
Pandemic funerals in Norway. Hartmut Rosa’s resonance as a sensitizing concept
(The Donner Institute, 08.03.2023)During the Covid-19 pandemic, funerals have been conducted consistently in Norway, but, of course, the ceremonies were subject to rules and regulations, while digitization was on the increase. Against the background of ... -
The role of flowers in the personalization of Christian funerals in Denmark
(The Donner Institute, 08.03.2023)Flowers are a common element in Danish funerals. Drawing on fieldnotes, interviews and survey data on funeral practices in the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Denmark as well as theories of ritualization, meaning-making and ... -
Until death do us part? Swedish cemeteries from and inter-faith and no-faith perspective
(The Donner Institute, 08.03.2023)In life, identity is based on many things. In death, people tend to be identified more on the basis of religion: separate cemeteries for Jews, Buddhists and the Plymouth Brethren, separate quarters for Muslims, Yezidis, ...