The Good Death Through Time

The Good Death Through Time
Caitlin Mahar
RRP:
NZ$ 40.00
Our Price:
NZ$ 33.00
Paperback
h233 x 154mm - 256pg
7 Feb 2023 AU
International import eta 7-19 days
9780522878127
Out Of Stock
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Can our forebears help us face complex questions of dying, now? ' I have quite a bit of understanding of white man' s ways, but it is difficult for me to understand this one. ' An Australian Senate committee investigation of the Northern Territory' s Rights of the Terminally Ill Act 1995, the first legislation in the world that allowed doctors to actively assist patients to die, found that for the vast majority of Indigenous Territorians, the idea that a physician - or anyone else - should help end a dying, suffering person' s life was so foreign that in some instances it proved almost impossible to translate. The Good Death Through Time asks how such a death became a ' thinkable' -even desirable-way to die for so many others in Western cultures. For centuries a good death - the ' euthanasia' - meant a death blessed by God that might well involve pain, for suffering was seen as ultimately redemptive. But in the Victorian age, when doctors started to treat the dying with painkillers as well as prayers, a painful death came to be thought of as an aberrant, dehumanising experience. As this book explores, the modern idea that a good death should be painless spurred sometimes troubling developments in palliative medicine as well as an increasingly well-organised assisted dying movement. Delving into what euthanasia activists, doctors, lawyers, religious leaders and lay people have thought and felt about dying, The Good Death Through Time shows that understanding the radical historical shift in Western attitudes to managing dying and suffering helps us better grasp the stakes in today' s contestations over what it means to die well.
Caitlin Mahar is an historian, educator and writer who lectures in history at Swinburne University of Technology. She completed a PhD in history at the University of Melbourne in 2016 and was awarded the Society for the Social History of Medicine Roy Porter Essay Prize, the Australian and New Zealand Society for the History of Medicine Ben Haneman Memorial Award and the University of Melbourne' s Dennis-Wettenhall Prize. She previously taught literature in the Trinity College Foundation Studies Program at the University of Melbourne and was a regular restaurant reviewer for Fairfax Media Publications.

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