Death & Mourning in Victorian Britain
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Sidney Smith
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
Victorian Britain lived in close and constant contact with death.
Disease, accident, and high infant mortality meant that dying was a familiar part of everyday life. Death did not take place behind hospital doors, but in bedrooms and parlours, witnessed by families and neighbours. Grief was not hidden. It was regulated, ritualised, and woven into daily behaviour.
This book explores how Victorians understood and dealt with death. It examines the customs surrounding dying at home, the preparation and viewing of the body, and the elaborate mourning practices that governed dress, behaviour, and social life. From post-mortem photography and horse-drawn funerals to the rise of professional undertakers, Victorian death was both deeply personal and increasingly public.
It also explores a growing fascination with medicine and the dead body. Anatomy schools, body snatching, and early embalming practices revealed a society caught between reverence and scientific curiosity. At the same time, vast new cemeteries and ornate mausoleums reshaped the landscape, turning burial into architecture, memory, and status.
Moving beyond nostalgia or sensationalism, Death & Mourning in Victorian Britain is a social history of how an entire society lived alongside mortality. It reveals what death meant in a world without modern medicine, and how its rituals shaped class, behaviour, and belief.
Part of the Hidden Histories series, this book tells the story of a culture that did not look away from death, but built its lives around it.