Disaster ritual. Explorations of an emerging ritual repertoire.
2003
People increasingly look to
ritualsafter a disaster. A silent procession and a memorial service are carefully and observantly organised, preparations are begun for a lasting monument in memory of the victims, or people keep up the tradition of an annual commemoration. Remarkably enough, this
ritualrepertoire has received hardly any attention from researchers. This book is a report on the first exploration of these
ritualswhich emerged particularly in the 1990s. The exploration focuses on the situation in the Netherlands. From the case studies analyzed a strikingly coherent and well-organised repertoire comes to light, which has become established in a rather short time. There appears to be interaction with both Dutch and international contexts (i.e., influence from the memorial
ritesafter the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, the 'Dutroux affair' in Belgium, and the
ritesafter a series of episodes of street violence in the Netherlands), as well as with previous, more divergent
ritualtraces of a Christian-
liturgical, general-religious and profane-secular nature. This study more particularly looks at disaster
ritualfrom the perspective of contemporary
ritualdynamics. As such, it makes a contribution to gauging the
ritual-
liturgicalmilieu today. To this end, the central concepts of disaster and
ritualare first defined. Next follows an assessment, first in general through a survey of disasters in the Netherlands and other countries, then on the basis of five Dutch case studies, each of which illuminates a particular theme in disaster
ritual, and two international case studies (the 'Estonia' ferryboat disaster and September 11). Then comes a more broadly conceived contextual and analytic chapter in which the general context of contemporary
ritualdevelopments is elaborated. The closing chapter has the nature of the familiar 'synthesis and perspective'.
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