最后一位

D. O'donoghue
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引用次数: 0

摘要

大规模传染病的历史和当代记录都为那些很少被认识、甚至更少被研究的人——那些埋葬死者的人——提供了曝光的机会。虽然全球报告证明,在当前的COVID-19大流行中,墓地工作人员进行了自我宣传,但他们劳动的心理复杂性几乎无人知晓。对从事这类工作的人的经历的调查结果揭示了一个惊人的对比。虽然社会的否定常常使他们的任务变得卑贱和被遗忘,但那些埋葬遗体的人经常报告与死者的情感联系,这有力而深刻地破坏了这种抹去。承认这种共情关系使我们能够在从未被考虑过的领域看待这个职业,例如精神分析工作中的“精神化”或当代伦理学。文章最后以纽约哈特岛(Hart Island)的集体墓地里埋葬死者的人的叙述为例。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Last place
Both historical and contemporary records of mass contagion provide occasions for visibility to persons who otherwise remain little recognised and even less studied: those who bury the dead. While global reports attest to self-advocacy among cemetery workers in the current COVID-19 pandemic, the psychological complexities of their labour go virtually unseen. Findings on the experiences of those doing such work reveal a striking contrast. While societal disavowal often renders their task as abject and forgettable, those who inter the remains frequently report affective connections to the dead that powerfully, and poignantly, undermine this erasure. Acknowledging such empathic relationality allows us to look at this profession in areas where it has never been considered, such as psychoanalytic work on ‘mentalisation’ or in contemporary ethics. The article concludes with an example from the accounts of those who have buried the dead in the massed graves on New York’s Hart Island.
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