Publication Cover
Mortality
Promoting the interdisciplinary study of death and dying
Volume 19, 2014 - Issue 1
486
Views
8
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Postmodern crematoria in the Netherlands: a search for a final sense of place

&

References

  • Ariès, P. (1981). The hour of our death. London: Allen Lane.
  • Augé, M. (1995). Non-places: Introduction to an anthropology of supermodernity. London: Verso.
  • Baudrillard, J. (1976). Symbolic exchange and death. London: Sage.
  • Bond, P. B. (1967). The celebration of death. Some thoughts on the design of crematoria. Pharos, 33, 62–66.
  • Cappers, W. (2002). Van zielloos tot bezield - funeraire architectuur in historisch perspectief [From soulless to spirited: Funerary architecture in a historical perspective]. In H. Hekkema, W. Cuyvers, & H. Heethuis (Eds.), Uitvaartcultuur als ontwerpopgave. Situering en architectuur van funeraire functies in een veranderende samenleving. Een ideeënprijsvraag voor studenten [The funeral industry as a design assignment. Location and architecture of funerary functions in a changing Society. A competition for students] (pp. 29–56). Zwolle: Esselink Stichting.
  • Cappers, W. (2012). Aan deze zijde van de dood. Funeraire componenten van seculariserende cultuurlandschappen in Nederland 1576–2010 [At this side of death. Funerary components of secularised cultural landscapes in the Netherlands 1576–2010]. Arnhem: Criterium.
  • Davies, D. J. (1995). British crematoria in public profile. Maidstone: Cremation Society of Great Britain.
  • Davies, D. J. (1996). The sacred crematorium. Mortality, 1, 83–94.
  • Davies, D. J. (2002). Death, ritual and belief (2nd Rev. ed.). London: Continuum.
  • Davies, D. J., & Guest, M. J. (1999). Disposal of cremated remains. Pharos International, 65, 26–30.
  • Debets, C. (2002). Geen open eind meer [No longer an open end]. BouwWereld, 12, 6–7.
  • de Groot, H. (2002). Tijd voor emoties [Time for emotions]. Het Houtblad, 14, 4–9.
  • Duijnhoven, D. (2002, May 12–13). Tegen de achteloosheid [Against indifference]. De Uitvaart, 5, 12–13.
  • Enklaar, J. (1995). Onder de groene zoden. De persoonlijke uitvaart [Six feet under. The personalized funeral]. Zutphen: Alpha.
  • ‘Exceptional’ Crematorium Praised. (2006, June 7). BBC News. Retrieved from http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/wales/5053602.stm
  • Fry, E. M. (1964). The design of modern crematoria. In Report of proceedings of the cremation society conference, Bournemouth (pp. 23–25). Maidstone: The Cremation Society.
  • Grainger, H. J. (2005). Death redesigned. British crematoria: History, architecture and landscape. Reading: Spire Books.
  • Gorer, G. (1965). Death, grief and mourning in contemporary Britain. London: Cresset Press.
  • Hamilton, K. (2006). Evidence based design and the art of healing. In C. Wagenaar (Ed.), The architecture of hospitals (pp. 271–280). Rotterdam: NAI.
  • Hannema, K. (n.d.). Crematorium Meerbloemhof. Mi modern architecture (MIMOA). Retrieved from http://www.mimoa.eu/projects/Netherlands/Zoetermeer/Crematorium%20Meer-Bloemhof
  • Heesels, M. (2012). Bringing home the dead: Ritualizing cremation in the Netherlands. Enschede: Ipskamp BV.
  • Hekkema, H. (2002). Uitvaartcultuur als ontwerpopgave: De oesters zijn gegeten, de witte wijn is gedronken [The oysters have been eaten, the white wine has been drunk]. In H. Hekkema W. Cuyvers, & H. Heethuis (Eds.), Uitvaartcultuur als ontwerpopgave. Situering en architectuur van funeraire functies in een veranderende samenleving. Een ideeënprijsvraag voor studenten [The funeral industry as a design assignment. Location and architecture of funerary functions in a changing society. A competition for students] (pp. 59–75). Zwolle: Esselink Stichting.
  • Hellman, L. (1982, July 14). Ashes to ashes: Crownhill crematorium, Milton Keynes. Architects’ Journal, 47–61.
  • Hertz, R. (1960). Death and the right hand. Glencoe, IL: The Free Press.
  • Howarth, G. (2007). Death & dying: A sociological introduction. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  • Hulsman, R. N., & Hulsman, M. (2008). Bouwen of de grens (deel zuid): Gids voor de funeraire architectuur in Nederland [Building on the edge (south volume): Guide for funerary architecture in the Netherlands]. Rotterdam: Uitgeverij Ger Guijs.
  • Hulsman, R. N., & Hulsman, M. (2010). Bouwen of de grens (deel midden & oost): Gids voor de funeraire architectuur in Nederland [Building on the edge (middle & east volumes): Guide for funerary architecture in the Netherlands]. Rotterdam: Uitgeverij Godoy & Godoy.
  • Joye, Y. (2006). An interdisciplinary argument for natural morphologies in architectural design. Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design, 33, 239–252.
  • Jupp, P. C., & Grainger, H. J. (2002). Golders Green Crematorium, 1902–2002: A London centenary in context. London: London Cremation Company.
  • Klaassens, M., & Groote, P. (2012). Designing a place for goodbye: The architecture of crematoria in the Netherlands. In D. Davies, & C. Park (Eds.), Emotion, identity and death: Mortality across disciplines. London: Ashgate.
  • Klaassens, M., & Groote, P. (2013). De ontwikkeling van crematorium-architectuur in Nederland: Tussen techniek en emotie [The development of crematorium architecture in the Netherlands: Between technique and emotion]. Terebinth, 27, 9–11.
  • Klaassens, M., Groote, P., & Huigen, P. P. P. (2009). Roadside memorials from a geographical perspective. Mortality, 14, 187–201.
  • Laderman, G. (2003). Rest in peace: A cultural history of death and the funeral home in twentieth-century America. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Ley, D. (1989). Modernism, post-modernism and the struggle for place. In J. Agnew & J. Duncan (Eds.), The power of place: Bringing together geographical and sociological imaginations (pp. 44–65). Boston, MA: Unwin Hyman.
  • LVC. (2013). Landelijke Vereniging van Crematoria. Retrieved from http://www.lvc-online.nl/aantallen
  • Perrée, H. (2009). Eén crematie per dag is te weinig [One cremation a day is not enough]. De Begraafplaats, 2, 14–16.
  • Publiek kiest crematorium: Ontwerp Rusthof wint prijs [The public chooses crematorium: Rusthof design wins prize]. (2003, June 7). Amersfoortse Courant.
  • Pursell, T. (2003). The burial of the future: Modernist architecture and the cremationist movement in Wilhelmine Germany. Mortality, 8, 233–250.
  • Sax, M., Visser, K., & Boer, M. (1989). Zand erover? De uitvaart meer in eigen hand [Playing a more active role in your funeral]. Amsterdam: Schorer.
  • Van Steen, P. J. M., & Pellenbarg, P. H. (2006). A Dutch geography of death: Introduction to the 2006 maps. Tijdschrift voor Economische en Sociale Geografie, 97, 104–107.
  • Wagenaar, C. (2006). The architecture of hospitals. Rotterdam: NAI.
  • Walter, T. (1994). The revival of death. London: Routledge.
  • Walter, T. (1996). Facing death without tradition. In G. Howarth & P.C. Jupp (Eds.), Contemporary issues in the sociology of death, dying and disposal (pp. 193–204). London: Macmillan.
  • Winkel, H. (2001). A postmodern culture of grief? On individualization of mourning in Germany. Mortality, 6, 65–79.
  • Wojtkowiak, J. (2011). I’m dead, therefore I am: The postself and notions of immortality in contemporary Dutch society. Enschede: Ipskamp Drukkers BV.
  • Worpole, K. (2003). Last landscapes: The architecture of the cemetery in the West. London: Reaktion Books.
  • Worpole, K. (2009). Modern hospice design: The architecture of palliative care. London: Routledge.
  • Wouters, C. (2002). The quest for new rituals in dying and mourning: Changes in the we-I balance. Body & Society, 8 (1), 1–28.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.