When Evelyn Waugh wrote The Loved One (1948) as a satire of the
elaborate preparations and memorialization of the dead taking place
in his time, he had no way of knowing how technical and
extraordinarily creative human funerary practices would become in
the ensuing decades. In Funeral Festivals in America, author
Jacqueline S. Thursby explores how modern American funerals and
their accompanying rituals have evolved into affairs that help the
living with the healing process. Thursby suggests that there is
irony in the festivities surrounding death. The typical American
response to death often develops into a celebration that
reestablishes links or strengthens ties between family members and
friends. The increasingly important funerary banquet, for example,
honors an often well-lived life in order to help survivors accept
the change that death brings and to provide healing fellowship. At
such celebrations and other forms of the traditional wake,
participants often use humor to add another dimension to expressing
both the personality of the deceased and their ties to a particular
ethnic heritage. In her research and interviews, Thursby discovered
the paramount importance of food as part of the funeral ritual.
During times of loss, individuals want to be consoled, and this is
often accomplished through the preparation and consumption of
nourishing, comforting foods. In the Intermountain West, AFuneral
Potatoes, @ a potato-cheese casserole, has become an expectation at
funeral meals; Muslim families often bring honey flavored fruits
and vegetables to the funeral table for their consoling
familiarity; and many Mexican Americans continue the tradition of
tamale making as a way to bring people together to talk, to share
memories, and to simply enjoy being together. Funeral Festivals in
America examines rituals for loved ones separated by death,
frivolities surrounding death, funeral foods and feasts,
post-funeral rites, and personalized memorials and grave markers.
Thursby concludes that though Americans come from many different
cultural traditions, they deal with death in a largely similar
approach. They emphasize unity and embrace rites that soothe the
distress of death as a way to heal and move forward.
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