Secularidad y espacios de enterramiento en la Inglaterra del siglo XIX

This paper challenges the contention that secularity is always central to the idea of the cemetery. In largely England a ‘culture war’ was enjoined between supporters of the Church of England and various denominations of Protestant Dissent. The cemetery was a focus of conflict, centred on the degree...

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Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor: Rugg, Julie
Formato: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2019
País:España
Recursos:Universidad de Murcia
Repositorio:DIGITUM. Depósito Digital Institucional de la Universidad de Murcia
OAI Identifier:oai:digitum.um.es:10201/85070
Acesso em linha:https://dx.doi.org/10.6018/rmu/375261
http://hdl.handle.net/10201/85070
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palavra-chave:Burial
Cemeteries
Secularity
Burial Acts
Nonconformist
Entierro
Cementerios
Secularidad
Leyes de enterramiento
No conformista
CDU::3 - Ciencias sociales::39 - Etnología. Etnografía. Usos y costumbres. Tradiciones. Folklore
Descrição
Resumo:This paper challenges the contention that secularity is always central to the idea of the cemetery. In largely England a ‘culture war’ was enjoined between supporters of the Church of England and various denominations of Protestant Dissent. The cemetery was a focus of conflict, centred on the degree of control exercised by the Established Church. This conflict did not reflect demand for ‘civic’ funerals. Protestant Nonconformists sought to secure burial space where they might express their own beliefs. Through the 19 th century and up until the First World War, the framing of burial law was accompanied by divisive debate. Cemeteries came to signify both religious freedom and the oppressive influence of the Established Church. Cemetery establishment was also accompanied by regulation on sanitary burial management, but this did not define burial space as being innately secular. Rather, in England the cemetery was, and remains, a spatial co-production of sanitary technology, municipal bureaucracy and spiritual expression.