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rituals organized as Facebook events. For some of us, however, hybrid media mourning and commemoration are not enough. I have noticed an emerging interest in digital afterlife, immortality, and life with ‘digital zombies’, as Debra Bassett (2015) characterizes this type of digitally immersed, post-mortal existence.

      As I began to put the various pieces of this manuscript together, a death event of an unimaginable scale was unfolding in hybrid media. In February and March 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic stretched across the globe, halting societies, closing borders, and forcing people to stay home. Death as mediated was the main news story for months. Bodies laid on the streets and in hotels, mass graves, overcrowded hospitals, traumatized medical workers, desperate family members, lost politicians, and angry crowds inundated our public lives through all forms of media, making it impossible to escape death.

      Figure 0.1 COVID-19 mural in Helsinki.

      Courtesy of Ester Speeänen.

      ‘Home is where your heart is’, they say. I wish to express my warm thanks for their co-authorship, intellectual encouragement, collegial support, and friendship to my Finnish colleagues, who have so generously offered their care and have helped me with various intellectual and practical challenges. Thank you, Katja Valaskivi, Minttu Tikka, Anu Harju, Salli Hakala, Lotta Lounasmeri, Lilly Korpiola, and many others with whom I have had a chance to share this academic and personal journey. Thanks for bearing with me during the not-so-cheerful moments of this project.

      I have been fortunate to have worked with numerous wonderful research assistants. Thank you, Maiju Lehikoinen, Annaliina Niitamo, Roosa Kontiokari, Anna-Liisa Heino, and Alli Wartiovaara for your precise work on polishing this manuscript. I must also express my warmest thanks to Polity Press and its supportive and highly professional editorial staff, including Mary Savigar, Ellen McDonald-Kramer, and Stephanie Homer. Any shortcomings of this book are mine and mine alone.

       Death is ultimately nothing more than the social line of demarcation separating the ‘dead’ from the ‘living’: therefore, it affects both equally.

      Baudrillard, 1993, p. 127

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