Life's End: Technocratic Dying in an Age of Spiritual Yearning
The explicit purpose of this book is to analyze dying and death in the cosmopolitan, modern setting. There is, however, an additional theme that is implicit in the analysis and observations. The portrait of dying, which is provided in the pages of the book, also tells us a great deal about life. It demonstrates that the foundation for the medicalization of death that piercingly shapes the life experience of dying persons and loved ones is a product of the ways of life in the broader culture.
1113467348
Life's End: Technocratic Dying in an Age of Spiritual Yearning
The explicit purpose of this book is to analyze dying and death in the cosmopolitan, modern setting. There is, however, an additional theme that is implicit in the analysis and observations. The portrait of dying, which is provided in the pages of the book, also tells us a great deal about life. It demonstrates that the foundation for the medicalization of death that piercingly shapes the life experience of dying persons and loved ones is a product of the ways of life in the broader culture.
28.99 In Stock
Life's End: Technocratic Dying in an Age of Spiritual Yearning

Life's End: Technocratic Dying in an Age of Spiritual Yearning

by David Wendell Moller
Life's End: Technocratic Dying in an Age of Spiritual Yearning

Life's End: Technocratic Dying in an Age of Spiritual Yearning

by David Wendell Moller

eBook

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Overview

The explicit purpose of this book is to analyze dying and death in the cosmopolitan, modern setting. There is, however, an additional theme that is implicit in the analysis and observations. The portrait of dying, which is provided in the pages of the book, also tells us a great deal about life. It demonstrates that the foundation for the medicalization of death that piercingly shapes the life experience of dying persons and loved ones is a product of the ways of life in the broader culture.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781351843249
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 05/23/2019
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 196
File size: 534 KB

About the Author

David Wendell Moller

Table of Contents

CHAPTER 1 Encountering M ortality: Prelim inary Reflections, CHAPTER 2 Contemplating Death: Human Voice, CHAPTER 3 The Problem of Meaning: Dying in an Age of Spiritual Longing, CHAPTER 4 Fear and Denial in the Modern Context, CHAPTER 5 Technological Medicine, Technocratic Physicians and Human Dying, Fellowship and Dying: The Problem of Detachment, CHAPTER 7 Impersonalism, Dying, and Social Organization of the Hospital, CHAPTER 8 The Stigma of Dying, CHAPTER 9 Approaching Omega: The Roller Coaster of Dying, CHAPTER 10 A Concluding Statement: Technicism, Social Isolation, Medicalization, and Remedicalization of Dying.

What People are Saying About This

Helen Orchard

In Life's End, David Wendell Moller has produced a thought-provoking and highly readable book which serves as a serious critique to the way the dying are cared for within current hospital environments. . . .This book has many strengths, but one of the most important is its deliberate use of the experiences of patients. Their voices are heard loud and clear through the inclusion of extended quotations which are deeply expressive, drawing the reader into the personal world of the dying and making this, at times, an intimate book. Nevertheless, in his bid to engage the reader, Moller has not sacrificed the clarity of his argument or its theoretical grounding. The breadth of his thought and the attempt to understand dying within the wider context of the societal forces of materialism, individualism and technical dependence proves stimulating and generates significant insights.
Senior Research Associate, Lincoln Theological Institute, The University of Sheffield, UK

Rev. Dr. Richard B. Gilbert

"Moller demands, with tough, thought provoking and hopeful words, that we rethink who we are, what we believe, how we practice our beliefs, and how our lifestyles impact often in negative ways our dying as well as our living. This is an important book. It will not sit comfortably with you. It will also prove a guide and a friend. It has as its essential theme, albeit simply put here, how we die is clearly dictated by how we live. Stated in another way, until we look at the problems inherent in contemporary lifestyles, as community, nation, planet and person, we will not affect the changes needed in how we die and how we care for the dying.
BCC, Resources Hotline, Volume 3, Number 22

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