Cemeteries GravemarkersRichard Meyer Utah State University Press, 1992 - 347 pages Cemeteries house the dead, but gravemarkers are fashioned by the living, who record on them not only their pleasures, sorrows, and hopes for an afterlife, but also more than they realize of their history, ethnicity, and culture. Richard Meyer has gathered twelve original essays examining burial grounds through the centuries and across the land to give a broad understanding of the history and cultural values of communities, regions, and American society at large. |
Contents
Victorian Childrens | 11 |
Stone Images of | 31 |
Images of Logging on Contemporary Pacific Northwest | 61 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
American cemeteries American Culture artifacts associated Bigham Boston Bridgeport burial grounds buried Carolina carved ceme cemeteries and gravemarkers century coat of arms contemporary dead death deceased Egyptian Revival epitaph essay ethnic examples Figure flowers Folklife Folklore funeral funerary grave decoration gravesite gravestones graveyard Green-Wood Green-Wood Cemetery Henry A. S. Dearborn images inscription John landscape Laurel Hill living logger logging Louis Cemetery lychgate marble markers Material Culture Memorial Monumental Bronze Mormon Mount Auburn Cemetery names Navajo Newport nineteenth-century Orleans Père Lachaise Philadelphia Photograph Ann Tashjian Pompe Stevens popular Pouilly Pouilly's practice Ramah Ramah Cemetery region Rural Cemetery San Fernando Cemetery Scotch Irish Spring Grove Steele Creek Presbyterian Stevens stone stone Stonecarving symbols tery Texas tion tomb Tombstones traditional University Press Upland South urban Victorian visitors visual white bronze white bronze monuments White Oak Springs York zinc Zuni