2010
DOI: 10.1558/bsor.v39i1.002
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Resurrected Bodies

Abstract: Abstract:The dissertation is an ethnographic study of religion as conceived and experienced by organ transplant recipients. It is also a cultural study of North America's collective expressions of transplant as found in Christian journals, popular media, advocacy literature and public policy statements. The study finds evidence that religious metaphors and directives, cosmological figures and theological arguments, rituals, scriptures and places of worship are actively, vociferously, and consciously engaged wi… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…And out of something so tragic as losing a loved one, something wholly good can happen. (Craig, 2009) As Macdonald (2009) argues, such memorializing practices do more than raise organ donor awareness; they are also spiritual and moral practices. Grieving family members are engaged in meaning-making by turning their decision to consent to organ donation into a public campaign.…”
Section: 41c Legacies and Dreamsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…And out of something so tragic as losing a loved one, something wholly good can happen. (Craig, 2009) As Macdonald (2009) argues, such memorializing practices do more than raise organ donor awareness; they are also spiritual and moral practices. Grieving family members are engaged in meaning-making by turning their decision to consent to organ donation into a public campaign.…”
Section: 41c Legacies and Dreamsmentioning
confidence: 99%