Tag Archives: cultural

Atul Gawande, Being Mortal and the 2014 Reith Lectures

Published on: Author: David Clark Leave a comment

It is not uncommon to refer to the United States as the most ‘death denying’ culture in the world. As one wag observed, ‘Americans don’t die, they just under achieve’.  Certainly America spends unprecedented amounts on health care in the last year of life – apparently in search of life extension, but often it seems… Continue reading

ATLANTES research programme: human dignity, advanced illness and palliative care

Published on: Author: David Clark 4 Comments

I have known and worked with Dr Carlos Centeno since we first met at a conference of the EAPC in Geneva in 1999. Over the years,  and as our friendship has grown, we have mainly collaborated on studies associated with the EAPC European Atlas of Palliative Care. Recently, Carlos has established the ATLANTES research programme… Continue reading

Bodies in metal: sustainable remains, technology and bodily disposal – by Ruth McManus

Published on: Author: David Clark 1 Comment

I like small scale but clever gadgets. Personal favorites are a 1950s wall hung hand coffee grinder and a steam driven stove top expresso pot. They are human scale technologies. While I gain much from the daily exertion they require, the longer I use them, the more I like to think I am paying my… Continue reading

To Absent Friends, a people’s festival of storytelling and remembrance – by Mark Hazelwood

Published on: Author: guwebteam Leave a comment

Four months ago our organisation, the Scottish Partnership for Palliative Care (SPPC) created a space on the web where anyone could post a brief message of remembrance about dead loved ones who remain important to them.  Little by little, day by day, non-virally, that space has grown into a powerful reminder of the diversity and… Continue reading

The Revival of Death: two decades on – by Tony Walter

Published on: Author: guwebteam 4 Comments

I have been on the phone for the past hour to a journalist writing an article on Death Cafés and the movement to get people talking about death. Is this, she asked, because death in our society is repressed? Is there a taboo against talking about it? “No,” I answered, “if we need to talk… Continue reading

Victorian legacies and death in the contemporary age

Published on: Author: David Clark 1 Comment

By the late nineteenth century, the people of Europe and North America were living longer and in societies of rapidly increasing size. A transformation of unprecedented proportions had brought industrialisation, urbanisation, geographic mobility, the rise of scientific rationalities, political and ideological upheaval, and a growing questioning of religious values. The population of Europe had doubled… Continue reading

‘Total pain’: the work of Cicely Saunders and the maturing of a concept

Published on: Author: David Clark 21 Comments

A striking feature of Cicely Saunders’ early work was its articulation of the relationship between physical and mental suffering. This reached full expression with the concept of ‘total pain’, which was taken to include physical symptoms, mental distress, social problems and emotional difficulties.  The idea was launched on the world exactly 50 years ago, in… Continue reading

The Project on Death in America: twenty years on

Published on: Author: David Clark Leave a comment

  To paraphrase the Beatles, it was 20 years ago this summer that a remarkable  group of clinicians, academics and activists got together under the patronage of the billionaire philanthropist, George Soros, to create an initiative with the disarming goal of transforming the culture of dying – in a society that is perhaps more death… Continue reading