This remarkable book--the fruit of almost two decades
of study--traces in compelling fashion the changes in
Western attitudes toward death and dying from the
earliest Christian times to the present day. A truly
landmark study, "The Hour of Our Death" reveals a
pattern of gradually developing evolutionary stages in
our perceptions of life in relation to death, each stage
representing a virtual redefinition of human nature.
Starting at the very foundations of Western culture, the
eminent historian Phillipe Aries shows how, from
Graeco-Roman times through the first ten centuries of
the Common Era, death was too common to be frightening;
each life was quietly subordinated to the community,
which paid its respects and then moved on. Aries
identifies the first major shift in attitude with the
turn of the eleventh century when a sense of
individuality began to rise and with it, profound
consequences: death no longer meant merely the weakening
of community, but rather the destruction of self. Hence
the growing fear of the afterlife, new conceptions of
the Last Judgment, and the first attempts (by Masses and
other rituals) to guarantee a better life in the next
world. In the 1500s attention shifted from the demise of
the self to that of the loved one (as family supplants
community), and by the nineteenth century death comes to
be viewed as simply a staging post toward reunion in the
hereafter. Finally, Aries shows why death has become
such an unendurable truth in our own century--how it has
been nearly banished from our daily lives--and points
out what may be done to "re-tame" this secret terror.
The richness of Aries's source material and
investigative work is breathtaking. While exploring
everything from churches, religious rituals, and
graveyards (with their often macabre headstones and
monuments), to wills and testaments, love letters,
literature, paintings, diaries, town plans, crime and
sanitation reports, and grave robbing complaints, Aries
ranges across Europe to Russia on the one hand and to
England and America on the other. As he sorts out the
tangled mysteries of our accumulated terrors and
beliefs, we come to understand the history--indeed the
pathology--of our intellectual and psychological
tensions in the face of death. |
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