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of hybrid media invites us – the living – to deal with death through other, more ancient means – gathering around death through hybrid media via symbolic and ritual communication, to overcome the fear of loss and annihilation stirred by the end of life (cf. Morley, 2007). This book positions itself at the heart of this paradox as it attempts to understand better the dilemma of mortality and its consequences in the present hybrid media-saturated society through the scope of mediated death.

      From this (media-) historical contextualization of mediated death, I move on in chapter 3 to examine public death as an event and a ritual. In my discussion, I draw on sociological event theory (see, e.g., Wagner-Pacifici, 2017) and look in particular at a public death event as a structure – an irreversible occurrence and a rupture in human life of profound sociological meaning (see also Sewell, 1990). By investigating public death as a mediated event, the book sheds light on death events’ special structural features associated with time and space, and connects the idea of the event with that of ritual as a particular formula and a unique structure of mediated death event. Here, the focus is on a category of ritual – life-crisis ritual. The chapter establishes a conceptual framework for the further analysis of mediated rituals and explains anthropological ideas first developed by van Gennep (1960 [1909]) and later elaborated on by Victor Turner (1969) on the workings of life-crisis rituals as ‘rites of passage’ through three key phases – rupture, liminality, and incorporation – and connects them with the work of ritual media events, and in particular, funerals (Dayan & Katz, 1992). The next chapters in the book build on the idea of liminal mourning in various hybrid media contexts, and critically examine how liminality in mediated life-crisis rituals functions in the present-day landscape of hybrid media, and what kind of social consequences result from these actions.

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