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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beautifully written and illustrated: the definitive book, 1 April 2001
By A Customer
This excellent book is a revised and much expanded edition of the author's original book of the same title.Curl traces the effects of the urbanisation and industrialization of Great Britain and its effect on public health and the funeral industry which was then in its infancy. He explores all aspects of the subject, beginning with Victorian attitudes to death in poetry and literature, then continues on to the more practical aspects, some of which are disturbingly unsavoury. Abuses, overcrowded churchyards, epidemics and concerns over public health are covered, as are the specialized parliamentary reports of the time and new legislation of the great Victorian cemeteries which are still with us today. No subject is too small for his attention, from the landscaping of the new garden cemeteries to the ephemera surrounding the funeral itself, mourning, jewellery, funeral carriges and of course, the opulently staged funerals of the rich. There is a chapter dedicated to the funerals of royalty which culminates in that of Queen Victoria herself. The text is interspersed and copiously illustrated with black and white photographs of elegant funeral memorials and romantically melancoly cemeteries. The text is scholarly, well ordered and comprehensive without being dry, it is extremely readable, with copious notes and a biography for those wanting references for further study. This book is THE definitive guide to this subject and absolutely invaluable to anyone studying the Victorian era, both for private or academic study. Personally, I feel it would have been advantageous to have a few coloured illustations but this is a minor criticism. James Stevens Curl has also written various books including "A Celebration of Death- An Introduction to some of the Buildings, Monuments, and Settings of Funerary Architecture in the Western European Tradition", "The Oxford Dictionary of Architecture" and "Victorian Churches" and various journal articles.
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