Through its description of who these individuals might have been, the cause of their death, and why they’re buried in such a peculiar manner, this NOVA program does an excellent job of educating and intriguing its viewers far more than any piece of art actually does. Pieces of architecture we commonly associated with the Roman Empire, like the Roman Forum or the famous baths of Rome, are expected to intrigue us because of how we regard the Romans as predecessors to our civilization. Rather it’s the less famous pieces of art that shouldn’t be ignored simply on the grounds that while they depict the decrepit concept of death, these grave sites are able to reveal just as much (if not more) about Roman society. By being able to not only put the flesh back on the bones of these deceased individuals but by also turning these skeletons into real people, the documentary Roman Catacomb Mystery exceptionally details how even graves containing mass death can be just as much a spectacular work of art as the Colosseum or even the…
There are several ways to memorialize a person or event. One can write a song, construct a scrapbook, or design a monument to commemorate a special person or a important event. In order to acknowledge a monument, first take in consideration that the location, size,a materials, and purpose either make be successful or unsuccessful. When a group or agency comes together as one to analyze memorializing an event or person through a monument, they have to dwell upon the location of the monument.…
1. Streetcars normally would be seen as merely a symbol of destiny or fate which is impossible to prevent due to the constant running on the rails to the final destination. However, Williams views the streetcar, “Desire”, as something more than just an undefined force because what led Blanche to her overall destruction is her sexual desire and passion. "Cemeteries", however, is connected to “Desire” because it reinforces the reminder that a life driven by desire only ends in one fatal way. A).…
Following momentous historic events, the population commonly desires some kind of commemoration of what has occurred. Consequently, massive monuments are often erected in the attempt to appease these desires, as well as to bring people together. Rather than achieving this goal, however, these monuments can ostracize certain populations with offensiveness or ignorance. As such, the factors that should be considered in memorializing an event or person are the significance of the event being honored and the impact of the piece on the people.…
When considering who or what to memorialize, or when or how to create a monument, context can be…
Memorializing people and events has been a tradition to many cultures throughout human history, they don’t only allow one to learn about the past, but to embrace it. One-way societies choose to memorialize is by establishing and creating monuments. For a group or agency to memorialize an event, certain factors should be considered, these factors include the size, location, and materials required to construct the monument. When these factors are taken into consideration, Monuments can provide tribute to significant and compelling events in history.…
Death is inevitable and the customs that follow one 's death are representive of the beliefs and shared religion of that society. Through the scope of this paper I will discuss the death rituals and tomb burial practices of both Ancient Egypt and Ancient China. Over the examination of Ancient Egypt and Ancient China burial practices we begin to understand the complex thought process of respecting the dead, Furthermore, even though both of these civilizations have individually intricate beliefs we can also see the similarities in their ideals and rituals used to honor the dead and afterlife. These societies performed rituals for their deceased by using key components such as symbolic material objects buried alongside the dead, elaborate decoration…
Death has always been seen as the essence of misery, darkness, and evil. When people are exposed to the concept of dying, they are frightened, because death leads to lands that are unknown to man. Even though people do not understand it, the unknown world of the afterlife is assumed to be cold and lonely, an inescapable void. People, when they think of death, are reminded of how they lost their loved ones to it, how they have mourned those they will never be able to see again. However, while this is the widespread view of the afterlife, there are people who see death as a new beginning.…
The Egyptians’ had luxuriously furnished tombs and grand funerals. Unlike the Mesopotamians, the Egyptians’ did not write in cuneiform, they wrote in pictorial hieroglyphics. Egyptian’s left pyramids and tombs as a mark of their belief in perpetual life. This is the difference between Mesopotamians, who did not leave grand structural design. Instead, they chose to write down extravagant myths that showed concern with the quality of life before instead of after…
Upon visiting Grove Cemetery, the first cemetery I have actually taken the time to stop and wander through, I was struck by how the arrangements of the dead make an intense effort to resemble those of the living. The cemetery incorporates the pavement of a central road that diverts off into separate streets, each with their own typical middle-American name. Walking down one of these ‘neighborhoods’ you notice the fenced gates of family burial plots, with an obelisk containing all the names and dates of birth and burial for each respective family member. These plots bear strikingly familiarity to family households, often considered to be the most crucial aspect of the social structure of human beings. This leads to the point that structure continues…
In this article, the author discusses the role that monuments play in the grief process and the recovery process of tragic events (24), focusing on how monuments serve as a reminder of a tremendous cost that was paid and what was lost (23). Durbin emphasizes that these monuments, or makeshift memorials, will continue to serve, throughout time, as important functions for coping with the aftermath of tragic events and trauma (38). Durbin discusses the role that memorials play in recalling tragic events, but also how these serve as objects to assuage the public’s grief. McConnell would argue that these memorials only remind the victim’s families of their lost loved ones, instead of serving as coping mechanisms.…
Burial of the dead can be explained as the act of placing the corpse of an individual in a tomb constructed for that purpose or in a grave dug into the earth. Ancient Greece had many thoughts concerning death and dying. The people of ancient Greece contracted burial under the earth and continued the tradition of the after-life existing underground. Ancient Greeks had beliefs in an afterlife and were fascinated with the human soul's roles, actions, and location after death. For the ancient Greeks, the funeral ritual was an essential key to the afterlife and contributed to help the individual on its way.…
Discuss Rossetti’s portrayal of death and the afterlife in Remember. Explore language, imagery, verse form and consider how you find it characteristic of Rossetti’s work in the collection. Growing up in an age renowned for its narrow-minded and obsessive behaviour when concering death, Rossetti conscripted her works idolising the methods of grievance and remorse, producing poems that fixate on the idea of death and afterlife. Additionally being heavily insprired by religion, her work shows traces of Christian messages revolving death and her beliefs about heaven.…
In conclusion, the theme of “The Grave” can be expressed through the many literary elements shown in the story. The fact that the kids are playing in a cemetery relates to part of the theme-death. In addition, Paul kills the rabbit. The other half of the theme is life and this story is mainly about Miranda’s life and how she is coming to terms with her feminine side. As life keeps on going, one may learn things about themselves that they never knew, but had known what it was all…
Although I managed to acquire enough information to formulate these conclusions, I encountered a couple of significant challenges in the pursuit of this data. Prior to starting my field work, I was quite naïve about gaining informants. I assumed since there were so many people working at the memorial, I would be able to talk with them and gain some useful information. However, within a week, I was informed of the official memorial policy, which stated that staff members, be they tour guides, janitors, or guards, could not talk to the “Press.”…