Death ends a Life not a Relationship: Timework and Ritualizations at Mindet.dk

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  • Dorthe Refslund Christensen
  • Kjetil Sandvik
When parents are expecting, the child is usually awaited with hope and plans and reflections on how to share the life and future with this new child. As such the child opens the parents' perspective to a new future, a span of time or potentiality, a certain narrative—that is, being parents, raising a child. When a child is stillborn or dies at a very young age, this event not only turns off all hopes for this particular child, but also all good things envisioned for the child and his or her family, the world itself changes radically. At the Danish website Mindet.dk, parents engage in ritualizations through which they resituate themselves in the world through performing their grief and loss, re-relating themselves to others and renewing their acquaintance with themselves and the world. These ritualizations are carried out through narratives and performances dealing with different aspects of the loss and are not about “translating” the everyday experience into, for instance, a religious realm. Rather “the work of ritual … involves developing repertoires that operate in complex interplay with the world of everyday experience” and, eventually, through time and repetition, lead to re-experiencing life.
Original languageEnglish
JournalNew Review of Hypermedia and Multimedia
Volume21
Issue number1-2
Pages (from-to)57-71
Number of pages15
ISSN1361-4568
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2015

    Research areas

  • Faculty of Humanities - Grief work, Parents, Infants, Stillborns, Online practices, Ritualizations

ID: 146359002