On the Southern Literary Trail discussion
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Customs surrounding death
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Death in England: An Illustrated History
Bereavement and Commemoration
Great Deaths: Grieving, Religion, and Nationhood in Victorian and Edwardian Britain (British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship Monographs)
Death, Mourning, and Burial
I know this is the Southern Literary Trail so apologies for no specifically American texts, but a lot of death customs originated in Georgian and Victorian Britain (hence some of the more geographically specific books) and were transferred to the US in the 19th and 20th century.


This is not the order of the day in West Texas where we have the funeral, the burial, and then the reception.
Has anyone read a book that talks about this? I can’t recall any from my reading experiences.
http://www.appalachiantalk.org/2019/0...
http://www.appalachiantalk.org/2019/0...
Laura wrote: "Has anyone read a book that talks about this? I can’t recall any from my reading experiences.
http://www.appalachiantalk.org/2019/0..."
I just read the article you linked. I must say this was a new one to me. I'll continue to dig. Ahem.
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http://www.appalachiantalk.org/2019/0..."
I just read the article you linked. I must say this was a new one to me. I'll continue to dig. Ahem.
.
One lady mentioned a book by Bobbie Ann Mason, Feather Crowns. Like you, new to me as well. Odd we’ve never seen a reference in all that we have read.
Laura wrote: "One lady mentioned a book by Bobbie Ann Mason, Feather Crowns. Like you, new to me as well. Odd we’ve never seen a reference in all that we have read."
Yes. I checked out Feather Crowns which concerns a Kentucky woman bears quintuplets in 1900. A goodreads reviewer indicates feather crowns specifically refers to the superstitionset out in the article you mentioned. Quite peculiar!
Yes. I checked out Feather Crowns which concerns a Kentucky woman bears quintuplets in 1900. A goodreads reviewer indicates feather crowns specifically refers to the superstitionset out in the article you mentioned. Quite peculiar!
Books mentioned in this topic
Feather Crowns (other topics)Death in England: An Illustrated History (other topics)
Bereavement and Commemoration: The Archaeology of Mortality (other topics)
Great Deaths: Grieving, Religion, and Nationhood in Victorian and Edwardian Britain (other topics)
Death, Mourning, and Burial: A Cross-Cultural Reader (other topics)
My mother always touched the corpse, so she wouldn't have nightmares about the dead.
My grandmother said that if you dreamed about a dead person, it meant it was going to rain.
They seem to conflict, a little. ;^)