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Is the Cemetery Dead? by David Charles Sloane

Douglas J. Davies considers an analysis of how funerary practices can take much greater account of ecological concerns

Published on
September 5, 2019
Last updated
September 5, 2019
Misty cemetery
Source: iStock

Death鈥檚 carbon footprint runs across this book鈥檚 threefold division of nature, mourning and memorials, as well as its encompassing themes of faith and secularisation, ideas of dying, practices of popular mourning and digital media in the US. This ecological focus on corpse disposal is also increasingly important in the UK funerary world, following the lead of environmentalism at large. It is likely to capture wide public attention in 2020, when the innovation of alkaline hydrolysis, or body dissolving, makes the headlines.

David Charles Sloane, born into a line of cemetery managers reaching back to 1876, teaches history in southern California. In December聽2007, he found his wife dead from a stroke. This, despite so much funeral-linked experience, made death鈥檚 鈥渃ruel realities鈥hatteringly clear鈥 to him. These interlaced elements bring emotion, insight and information to the core question of how environmental issues balance against the cultural heritage of cemetery memorials, especially when negotiating experiences of bereavement.

Ecological questions underlie Sloane鈥檚 approach to the economics of funerals, especially given US landscaped cemeteries and concrete- and steel-lined burial vaults, so unlike the UK practice of earth-walled graves. Similarly, heavily constructed caskets for bodies, extensive embalming of the dead and chemicals used for lawn maintenance all carry environmental costs. The author cites annual estimates of US cemeteries using some 30聽million feet of hardboard, more than 100,000聽tonnes of steel and over one and a half million tonnes of concrete. To this can be added 800,000 gallons of embalming fluid, including much formaldehyde.

But not all the 2.2聽million US annual dead are buried. Cremation is on the rise after a slow start, as we can see from these approximate percentages of deaths over time for the US聽and the UK: 1960: 4聽per cent and 35聽per cent; 1970: 5 and 56聽per cent; 1980: 10 and 65聽per cent; 1990: 17 and 70聽per cent; 2000: 25 and 72聽per cent. Sloane says that in 2015, cremation accounted for roughly 49聽per cent of US deaths, by when the UK had reached 76聽per cent. He rightly argues that 19th-century innovators saw cremation as a sanitary form of disposal, but what was then 鈥済reen鈥 now throws much darker shadows. Each US cremation apparently generates 540lb (245kg) of carbon dioxide.

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While Sloane says that few ponder such environmental costs, he writes favourably about Ken West, the Englishman who inaugurated 鈥渨oodland burial鈥 while overseeing Carlisle鈥檚 cemetery and who decries cremation for its use of fossil fuels, waste of the body鈥檚 biodegradable resources and the materials deployed in crematoria. Problems over mercury (cremercury) and other noxious cremation gases are also germane.

While Sloane鈥檚 one driving theoretical notion 鈥 cultural hybridity 鈥 envisages all funeral options coexisting in time and space, he hopes that energy-efficient practices will prevail, especially as millennial generations hold their memorials online and avoid cemetery ceremony. Historians may question the author鈥檚 overlapping eras of sentimentality: from 1831 to the 1890s; of mourning and commemoration from the 1870s to the 1970s (with its professionalisation and medicalisation of death services); and then the 鈥渞evival of death鈥 between the 1960s and the 1980s, when some families engaged in personalising funerals and creating street memorials, while hospices developed their niche approach to dying. Although Sloane mentions racism, gender is left untouched. His endnotes are good, but the absence of a formal bibliography is unfortunate. Still, the book鈥檚 photographs, tables and ecological thrust enliven contemporary American ways of death.

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Douglas J. Davies, professor in the study of religion and director of the Centre for Death and Life Studies at Durham University, is the author of Mors Britannica: Lifestyle and Death-Style in Britain Today (2015) and Death, Ritual and Belief (third edition, 2017).


Is the Cemetery Dead?
By David Charles Sloane
University of Chicago Press
288pp, 拢20.50
ISBN 9780226539447
Published 12聽June 2018

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Ends within the Earth鈥檚 means

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