Reference : Cemeteries as Translocal Contact Zones: Navigating Regulations, Unwritten Rules and D...
Parts of books : Contribution to collective works
Arts & humanities : Multidisciplinary, general & others
Sustainable Development
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/55430
Cemeteries as Translocal Contact Zones: Navigating Regulations, Unwritten Rules and Divergent Expectations in Luxembourg City
English
Westendorp, Mariske mailto [University of Utrecht]
Kmec, Sonja mailto [University of Luxembourg > Faculty of Humanities, Education and Social Sciences (FHSE) > Department of Humanities (DHUM) >]
Jun-2023
Mobilities in Life and Death Negotiating Room for Migrants and Minorities in European Cemeteries
Maddrell, Avril mailto
Kmec, Sonja mailto
Priya Uteng, Tanu mailto
Westendorp, Mariske mailto
Springer
Imiscoe Research Series
43-64
Yes
978-3-031-28283-6
Cham
Switzerland
lived citizenship; contact zone; inclusion; deathscape; diversity
Migration, intercultural encounters and integration do not cease with death, but are taken with the deceased into cemetery grounds. This article explores the translocal dimension of cemeteries, where diverse expectations and practices are confronted by, engage with and respond to regulations and unwritten rules of a particular public space. This article looks at migrants who wish to be buried or have buried close kin or friends in Luxembourg, a small country in Northwestern Europe. Disposition of the dead in the host country instead of post-mortal repatriation is often seen as sign of integration or belonging. However, this choice must be understood in the context of a set of constraints that can be experienced in a variety of ways. Examining three contested issues at cemeteries (burial practices, cemetery and grave design, and grave perpetuity), we show how both the regulations and unwritten rules of cemeteries are negotiated and challenged by individual migrants and migrant communities, highlighting different practices of lived citizenship. Based on participant experiences and narratives, we argue for the necessity of valuing and managing cemeteries, less as bounded spaces that can foster integration during life and after, but as permeable and transformative contact zones in which translocal citizenship can be enacted.
http://hdl.handle.net/10993/55430

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