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      From Ritual Mourning to Solitary Grief: Reinterpretation of Hindu Death Rituals in India

      research-article
      1 , 2
      Omega
      SAGE Publications
      Hindu death rituals, COVID-19, good and bad death, stigma, rites de passage

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          Abstract

          This paper considers the way the outbreak of coronavirus and the subsequent lockdown has egregiously impeded the Hindu death ceremonies and mourning rituals in India. It makes a comparative analysis of how Hindu death rituals get renegotiated, modified and reinterpreted across two vastly different regions of India, both of which have their local customs. Whilst death rituals in India are contingent on the deceased’s caste, community, class, gender and age, the impediment to the major death rituals creates a central conundrum for all mourners. It results from the substitution of ‘sacred’ ritual guidelines with new ‘profane’ ones for the ‘disposal’ of deceased COVID-19 patients. Departure from many significant pre-liminal rites, specific transition rites, and post-liminal rites has eschatological, ritual and cultural ramifications. The inability to grieve in unison during a Shraddh ceremony denies mourners any scope to quell distressing feelings about mortality which serves as a source of consolation.

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          Bereavement, grief, and consolation: Emotional-affective geographies of loss during COVID-19

          COVID-19 has resulted in new global geographies of death ranging from cellular to global scales. These geographies are uneven, reflecting existing inequalities and failures of governance. In addition to death and bereavement, the pandemic has generated varied forms of loss and consolation, as well as negative and positive affective atmospheres, whereby emotions are mobilised and politicised. Understanding these emotional-affective topographies and ‘emotional-viral-loads’ is vital to wellbeing, resilience, and unfolding policy interventions locally and globally.
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            The rites of passage

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              Affliction: Health, disease, poverty

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Omega (Westport)
                Omega (Westport)
                spome
                OME
                Omega
                SAGE Publications (Sage CA: Los Angeles, CA )
                0030-2228
                1541-3764
                31 March 2022
                June 2024
                : 89
                : 2
                : 759-776
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies (ISEK), Ringgold 27217, universityUniversity of Zurich; , Zurich, Switzerland
                [2 ]CSSS/SSS, Ringgold 28754, universityJawaharlal Nehru University; , New Delhi, India
                Author notes
                [*]Banhishikha Ghosh, Department of Social Anthropology and Cultural Studies (ISEK), University of Zurich, Andreasstrasse 15, Zurich 8006, Switzerland. Email: gbanhishikha@ 123456gmail.com , banhishikha.ghosh@ 123456uzh.ch
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6354-9047
                Article
                10.1177_00302228221085175
                10.1177/00302228221085175
                11100263
                35360983
                87a37d03-c484-4ed6-a331-0e88bcfbbb61
                © The Author(s) 2022

                This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License ( https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page ( https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).

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                hindu death rituals,covid-19,good and bad death,stigma,rites de passage

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