Authority from grief, presence and place in the making of roadside memorials.

Death Stud

School of Classics, History and Religion, University of New England, Armidale NSW, Australia, 2351.

Published: July 2006

Those who make memorials for the victims of motor vehicle crashes assume an authority to do so that stems from three main elements of experience: the overwhelming empowerment of grief; the belief that the presence of the deceased can be felt and recognized; and the understanding that the place where life was lost is a special place for memorialization. The strength of grief, the power of presence and the importance of place allows ordinary people to assume and, therefore, challenge the authority of the church and the government as official purveyors and regulators of mourning ritual.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07481180600742574DOI Listing

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