2015
DOI: 10.1080/1472586x.2015.996395
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Gravesites and websites: a comparison of memorialisation

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Cited by 25 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…More generally, the use of online cemeteries, virtual gravesites 23 or memorialised social media pages such as those on Facebook were collectively gaining popularity with those who already use social media in their day-to-day lives, 24 enabling them to maintain the presence of the deceased and facilitate an ongoing conversation with them in which others can also participate. 25 Memorialisation practices are socially mediated by culture, religion and geographic contexts, but the fundamental ethos of 'returning to nature' seems to have survived secularisation.…”
Section: Memorialisation Practices Pre-covid-19mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More generally, the use of online cemeteries, virtual gravesites 23 or memorialised social media pages such as those on Facebook were collectively gaining popularity with those who already use social media in their day-to-day lives, 24 enabling them to maintain the presence of the deceased and facilitate an ongoing conversation with them in which others can also participate. 25 Memorialisation practices are socially mediated by culture, religion and geographic contexts, but the fundamental ethos of 'returning to nature' seems to have survived secularisation.…”
Section: Memorialisation Practices Pre-covid-19mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Existing work on design and mortality in HCI, includes design for looking back and on physical/digital memorials [3,15,17,18,30,32,33,39,49,54]; design perspectives on phases of letting go [38,45]; time, loss and change in relation to new media [46,48]; new forms of legacy for the dead [42]; thanatosensitivity [31]; photographs and living on [14]. There is a scarcity of research exploring the value of continuing bonds however, Getty et al [12], Ataguba [2] and Wallace et al [51,52] being the exceptions.…”
Section: Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A growing number of researchers consider the Internet to be a central component in shaping current public discourse, norms, and practices related to death (Graham, Arnold, Kohn, & Gibbs, 2015;Walter, Hourizi, Moncur, & Pitsillides, 2012). Online memorials or virtual cemeteries were the focus of research on digital forms of remembrance beginning in the late 1990s.…”
Section: Death and The Digital Agementioning
confidence: 99%