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Meaning of thanatopraxis | Babel Free

Noun CEFR C1

Definitions

Funeral rites; death rituals or practices.

uncommon, uncountable, usually

Examples

“[I]t is the English version of Western death that seems to be spreading more widely[…], both in the thanatopraxis of cremation which is spreading even in Portugal with the blessing of the Catholic Church and in the cultural ideals of dying […] In the 'symbolic' perspective one studies death through the prism of cosmology and community, collective and individual representations, mortuary rites, the cultural regulation of the emotions, thanatopraxis, mourning customs, the iconology of death.”
“Le travail de deuil, est-ce un travail, une espèce de travail? Et la thanatopraxie, technique de la pompe funèbre aujourd’hui enseignée dans des instituts, donnant lieu à des diplômes de qualification, la limiterat-on à une corporation parmi d’autres, à l’intérieur d’une économie sociale?”
“In some respects the thanatopraxis of the Cantonese as described by James Watson is more discrepant, though I will indicate later in this chapter key underlying uniformities. […] Another standard feature of Chinese thanatopraxis is that, whereas spirit-money, paper houses, paper representations of clothes, a set of real new clothes, and other items are all transmitted to the deceased in the otherworld by burning, food is never burned for the dead. […] An individual’s biological death is merely a chapter-ending in that individual’s more extensive biography. This notion, of course, is widespread and by no means specific to the Chinese syndrome of beliefs and thanatopraxis.”
“The following essays attempt to establish subtle connections between many unusual themes, commonplaces and well-known political phenomena: namely, […] cartomancy, thanatopraxis, ethnopsychiatry, […] Thanatopraxis consists of a technique whereby a corpse undergoes somatic treatment and is then stored, a practice that substitutes the ancient religious one of simply burying mortal remains in a cemetery as soon as possible. […] Sophisticated thanatopraxis can work marvels with corpses deformed by accidents, skin diseases, cancer and other mutilations. There are specialized treatments for overweight or pregnant corpses. […] D. Rochette, quoted by Louis-Vincent Thomas, Mort et pouvoir, Paris: Payot, 1978, p. 129. My description of thanatopraxis comes from this book.”
“Therefore, every thanatopraxis, even in contemporary societies, is analysed as the will to ward off this sudden loss of signs that befalls the dead, to prevent there remaining, in the asocial flesh of the dead, something which signifies nothing.”
“What Ziegler (1982), the Swiss sociologist and politician, states about death in his remarkable book ‘Die Lebenden und der Tod’ (‘The Living and Death’) in which he compares the thanatopraxis – i.e. the way cultures deal with the fact of death – in our capitalist ‘Producer-Society’ with an African culture in Brazil, can be seen as the dominant image of man: “People produce goods and so themselves become products” (Ziegler (1982), 15). […] According to this more person-oriented perspective, the focus on our contemporary thanatopraxis relates more to the personal experience of life and death in the context of its social construction. […] Seriously acknowledging mortality as a human quality of all men and women would eliminate the main basis for inequality which, enforced by the total ignorance of death, is permanently maintained in the thanatopraxis of western societies. […] Contemporary thanatopraxis seems, as far as its lack of participation and self-management is concerned, to mirror the everyday reality in industrial enterprises.”
“The funeral parlor sent a specialist trained at the French Institute of Thanatopraxis to prepare the body for burial, with the usual arranging of the face and body to best advantage.”
“I had to explore, area by area, the death practices (thanatopraxis) of the commercial capitalist societies of the West, […] The thanatopraxis of commercial societies brings legal assassination, as surely as clouds bring storms. . . . There is nothing, absolutely nothing, in the conceptual apparatus of contemporary thanatocrats to exclude the arrival of a thanatopraxis similar to that practiced by Nazi barbarity.”
“For Baudrillard all societies, ‘primitive’ and modern, share a necessary ‘thanatopraxis’. This means that any society must do something to ward off or make meaningful the ‘sudden loss of signs that befalls the dead, to prevent there remaining in the asocial flesh of the dead something which signifies nothing’ (1993a: 180).”
“The series dramaturgy is therefore far removed from the idea of a chronic illness, whether degenerative or not, but rather placed in a setting much closer to the original model of the resuscitated corpse, matching a culture that systematically practices thanatopraxis and embalming before burial.”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.

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