
A History Of Mourning
Richard Davey(Author)
ALPHA EDITION (Publisher)
Published on 5. November 2020
Book
Paperback/Softback
116 pages
978-93-5421-357-1 (ISBN)
Description
Grief was a public language in Victorian Britain. Mourning shaped a nation's rituals.
Richard Davey's A History of Mourning offers an attentive exploration of the rituals of mourning and the funeral customs in England that ordered private feeling and public life across nineteenth-century Britain. Part cultural history book and part historical nonfiction collection, it brings together contemporary observation and social reflection to map how communities coped with loss. As a study of grief and society, the work moves beyond sentiment to show the social grammar - the etiquette, symbols and communal rites - that turned bereavement into public practice. Davey's eye for social nuance records how ritual and public mourning shaped identity, gender roles and communal expectation, making these pages valuable not only to lovers of historical detail but to students of Victorian social history and Victorian era studies. Presented in lucid prose with studious attention to period detail, the volume functions as both an accessible read and a dependable academic research resource, a reference for historians and anyone enquiring into death and bereavement. Its mixture of contemporary reportage and analytical observation gives immediate moments and broader cultural framing, so private loss becomes visible as public history. The tone is observant rather than sensational; its detail reads as evidence of social change.
Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike.
Historically significant for its contemporary perspective on mourning practices, the book remains an instructive social customs anthology for research and reflection. Casual readers will find the humane observations compelling; classic-literature collectors and libraries will value the restored text as an enduring cultural history book and a useful resource for studies of funeral customs England and the social history of mourning. Its combination of readable narrative and documentary breadth makes it suited to coursework and to personal libraries; passages repay careful rereading and cross-reference in Victorian era studies. Whether consulted for curiosity, scholarship or collecting, the volume bridges the interests of casual readers and specialist historians.
More details
Language
English
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 280 mm
Width: 216 mm
Thickness: 7 mm
Weight
314 gr
ISBN-13
978-93-5421-357-1 (9789354213571)
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Schweitzer Classification