This engrossing book explores family experiences of
dying, death, grieving, and mourning between 1830 and
1920. Victorian letters and diaries reveal a deep
preoccupation with death because of a shorter life
expectancy, a high death rate for infants and children,
and a dominant Christian culture. Using the private
correspondence, diaries, and death memorials of
fifty-five middle and upper-class British families, Pat
Jalland shows us how dying, death, and grieving were
experienced by Victorian families and how the manner and
rituals of death and mourning varied with age, gender,
disease, religious belief, family size and class. She
examines deathbed scenes, good and bad deaths, funerals
and cremations, widowhood, and the roles of religion and
medicine. Chapters on the deaths of children and old
people demonstrate the importance of the stages of the
life-cycle, as well as the failure of many actual
deathbeds to achieve the Christian ideal of the good
death. The consolations of Christian faith and private
memory, and the transformation in the ideas and beliefs
about heaven, hell, and immortality are analysed. The
rise and decline of Evangelicalism, the influence of
unbelief and secularism, falling mortality, and the
trauma of the Great War are all key motors of change in
this period.
This fascinating study of death and
bereavement in the past helps us to understand the
present, especially in the context of the modern
tendency to avoid the subject of dying, and to minimize
the public expression of grief. In their practical and
compassionate treatment of death, the Victorians have
much to teach us today.
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