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Inventing Afterlives

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Regina M. Janes proposes a new theory of the origins of the hereafter. Drawing on a variety of religious traditions and contemporary literature and film as well as cognitive science and evolutionar...
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  • 31 July 2018
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Why is belief in an afterlife so persistent across times and cultures? And how can it coexist with disbelief in an afterlife? Most modern thinkers hold that afterlife belief serves such important psychological and social purposes as consoling survivors, enforcing morality, dispensing justice, or giving life meaning. Yet the earliest, and some more recent, afterlives strikingly fail to satisfy those needs.

In Inventing Afterlives, Regina M. Janes proposes a new theory of the origins of the hereafter rooted in the question that a dead body raises: where has the life gone? Humans then and now, in communities and as individuals, ponder what they would want or experience were they in that body. From this endlessly recurring situation, afterlife narratives develop in all their complexity, variety, and ingenuity. Exploring afterlives from Egypt to Sumer, among Jews, Greeks, and Romans, to Christianity’s advent and Islam’s rise, Janes reveals how little concern ancient afterlives had with morality. In south and east Asia, karmic rebirth makes morality self-enforcing and raises a new problem: how to stop re-dying. The British enlightenment, Janes argues, invented the now widespread wish-fulfilling afterlife and illustrates how afterlives change. She also considers the surprising afterlife of afterlives among modern artists and writers who no longer believe in worlds beyond this one. Drawing on a variety of religious traditions; contemporary literature and film; primatology; cognitive science; and evolutionary psychology, Janes shows that in asking what happens after we die, we define the worlds we inhabit and the values by which we live.

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Price: $37.00
Pages: 392
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date: 31 July 2018
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231185714
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

LITERARY CRITICISM / Comparative Literature, LITERARY CRITICISM / Subjects & Themes / Religion, RELIGION / Comparative Religion, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Death & Dying, RELIGION / Psychology of Religion, BODY, MIND & SPIRIT / Afterlife & Reincarnation

This engaging and thought-provoking book has a capacious range that includes those who believe there is no afterlife and spans time from the ancient Greeks and Egyptians to our current scientific, psychological, and religious thinking about what we imagine—or hope—happens after death.
Regina M. Janes is professor of English at Skidmore College. Her books include Gabriel García Márquez: Revolutions in Wonderland (1981); One Hundred Years of Solitude: Modes of Reading (1991); and Losing Our Heads: Beheadings in Literature and Culture (2005).

Preface
1. Concerning the Present State of Life After Death
2. Impermanent Eternities: Egypt, Sumer and Babylon, Ancient Israel, Greece, and Rome
3. Touring Asian Afterlives: Eternal Impermanence
4. Pursuing Happiness: How the Enlightenment Invented an Afterlife to Wish For
5. Wandâfuru Raifu or Afterlife Inventions and Variations
Notes
Index