The Bloomsbury Handbook of Language and Death
Series: Bloomsbury Handbooks;
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Product details:
- Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing (UK)
- Date of Publication 5 March 2026
- ISBN 9781350302013
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages424 pages
- Size 246x176x28 mm
- Weight 900 g
- Language
- Illustrations 9 b&w 693
Categories
Long description:
An essential reference to the intersection of language and death and dying, this book presents an overview of the methodologies, current debates, history and future of research in language-related death studies.
Adopting a highly interdisciplinary approach, the book explores a wide variety of phenomena and contexts of death and dying, examining language and discourse from linguistic, psychological, philosophical, and anthropological perspectives, among others. Divided into three parts, it considers three viewpoints from which death and dying can be understood: first-person, second-person, and third-person. The chapters cover an extensive array of topics, from presentations of death within social media and news reports, through to specific contexts of dying and types of death, including palliative care, assisted dying, suicide, and COVID-19. They also engage with data from across a range of national, cultural, and linguistic contexts, offering a broad international perspective.
Table of Contents:
"
List of Figures
List of Tables
Introduction, Justyna Ziï¿1⁄2lkowska (SWPS University, Poland), Dariusz Galasinski (University of Wroclaw, Poland) and Magdalena Witkowicz (University of Wroclaw, Poland)
Part I: Personal Experiences of Death
1. The Good Death, Alex Broom, Nadine Ehlers, Henrietta Byrne, Leah Williams Veazey and Katherine Kenny (University of Sydney, Australia)
2. The Identification of Linguistic Markers of Suicidal Ideation on Social Media: Computational and Corpus Approaches, Andrea Vaughan (University College London, UK)
3. ""There Are no Words"": Designating Infant Loss through the Lens of Situated Discourse Analysis, Giuditta Caliendo and Catherine Ruchon (University of Lille, France)
4. The Sociolinguistics of Dying, Death and Mourning: Remediating Practices of Language, Narrative, and Affect in Digital Contexts, Korina Giaxoglou (Open University, UK)
5. Medicalisation of Death in COVID-19 Memorials, Dariusz Galasinski (University of Wroclaw, Poland), Magdalena Witkowicz (University of Wroclaw, Poland) and Justyna Ziï¿1⁄2lkowska (University of Social Sciences and Humanities, Poland)
6. Corpse Poetry, Dead Bodies and Linguistic Survival, Katrina Jaworski (Adelaide University, Australia) and Daniel G. Scott (University of Victoria, Canada)
Part II: Death from a Professional Perspective
7. Communicating Death in Intensive Care: The Impact of Prior Family Interactions on Breaking the News, Ana Cristina Ostermann (Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Brazil), Paola Gabriela Konrad (Universidade do Vale do Rio dos Sinos (Unisinos), Brazil) and Josï¿1⁄2 Roberto Goldim (Hospital de Clï¿1⁄2nicas de Porto Alegre (HCPA), Brazil)
8. Psychiatrists, Suicide and Clinical Communication, Rob Poole (Bangor University, UK)
9. Medicalised or Criminalised? Gendered Constructions of Killers Within Legal and Psychiatric Narratives, Agnieszka Karlinska (NASK National Research Institute, Poland)
10. Telling of Killing: The Discursive Construction of Morality in Accounts of Taking Life, Robin Conley Riner (Marshall University, USA)
11. Discursive Perspectives on Assisted Dying, Gavin Brookes (Lancaster University, UK) and David Wright (University of Southampton, UK)
12. Assisted Dying: Mapping the Terrain, Jessica Young (University of Otago, New Zealand), Bryanna Moore (University of Texas Medical Branch, USA) and Courtney Hempton (Deakin University, Australia)
13. The Language of Suicide, David Lester (Stockton University, USA)
Part III: Public Representations of Death
14. Death and the Sacred in the Digital Age, Adela Toplean (University of Bucharest, Romania)
15. Talking about Death to Young Children: The Metaphorical Representation of Death in Children's Literature, Sara Vilar-Lluch (Cardiff University, UK)
16. Death in the News: A Corpus-Based Critical Discourse Analysis, Rakan Alibri (Lancaster University, UK)
17. Dementia, Death and Discourse, Emma Putland and Gavin Brookes (Lancaster University, UK)
18. Intersecting Discourses of Death and the Climate Crisis, Niall Curry (Manchester Metropolitan University, UK)
19. Freezing Death: Cryopreservation as a Challenge to the Inevitability of Death, Kim Grego (University of Milan, Italy)
Index