Desire, duty and medical gifting: how it became possible to long for a useful death

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Abstract

It is common in social science critique of medical uses of the body to portray donation of the dead body as a sacrifice. In contemporary Denmark, however, some people claim to desire post-mortem utility. Here we argue that the articulated desires for utility should not be written off as false consciousness hiding a ‘real’ sacrifice. People use medical promises to reinvent the meaning of death; and, in turn, they make promises to medical institutions by signing up as donors. Registrations of post-mortem donations serve to uphold a sense of control; ensure post-vital dignity, and to align people with wider socially engrained ideals of productivity and agency. We build our argument on interviews conducted in Denmark 2007–2018.

Original languageEnglish
JournalMortality
Number of pages15
ISSN1357-6275
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2020

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