Megan O'Rourke has a really eloquent and important article on the history of grieving in the New Yorker. She spends a lot of time on the life and death of Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, who invented the five stages theory of human grief. (It turns out the stages don't really exist.) But I was most interested in this paragraph on the death of public funeral rituals - we no longer grief with others, unless we're grieving over Princess Diana or Michael Jackson - and how it was driven, at least in part, ...
Published on February 04, 2010 08:34