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Index: Miscellaneous
Cultural Analysis on Death and the Afterlife
Essay written by Jeff Jin Hung Tong
If there is one constant in this world, it would surely be death.
Dying is an unavoidable part of life. Indeed, everything that lives
will at sometime die. The fear of death is held by everyone.
Perhaps it is the correlation of death with pain or the unknown
state of the human consciousness after death, maybe a combination
of both, that creates this fear. The fear felt is undoubtedly
universal, however, the ways in which it is dealt with are varied
and diverse. The concept of human mortality and how it is dealt
with is dependent upon one s society or culture. For it is the
society that has great impact on the individual s beliefs. Hence,
it is also possible for other cultures to influence the people of a
different culture on such comprehensions.
The primary and traditional way men and women have made dying a
less depressing and disturbing idea is though religion. Various
religions offer the comforting conception of death as a begining
for another life or perhaps a continuation for the former.
Christians, for example, believe that souls that have lived by the
words of their God will exist eternally in heaven as divine beings
themselves. This conception of an afterlife is generally what we
people who are residents of the Unitied States hold to be true. For
American culture has its roots in Europe and European culture was
and is still influenced by Christian faiths. Similar to
Christianity, the Hinduism also eases the fear of death by
presenting a life after death. Disimilarities present themselves in
the two faiths concerning exactly what kind of afterlife is lived.
Believers of the Hindu faith expect to be reincarnated after their
demise, either as an animal or human being depending on the manner
in which their lives were carried out. These ideals have influenced
our culture though our use of language and thought. The
implications are apparent in the common references to one s past
lives. For instance, if someone has a natural talent for music one
may refer to the person as being once a talented musician in a past
life. A religion which describes death as a continuation of
existance is held by the Crow tribe of middle America. They viewed
death as a journey with the final destination as a place where all
their anscestors have gone before them. This notion of an afterlife
eased the tribes assimilation into Christian culture when colonists
came in contact with the Native Americans during the colonial
expansion period.
Examining further into the past, myths were first used to explain
the conclusion to one s life. Looking at what little literature
that has been found which has been writen by the Sumerians, a
picture of an afterlife is formed. Their idea of an afterlife is
illustrated though the Epic of Gilgamesh. The death of the
protagonist s friend, Enkidu, allows the reader a glimpse into this
existance. Enkidu describes the afterlife as being spent
underground for all time, doing exactly nothing that is either
enjoyable or exciting. The concept from the Ancient Sumerians have
definitely influenced the Ancient Greeks.
The Greeks believed in an
underworld in which they spent eternity in. The realm was a shadow
of their formal lives. Happiness was not conceivable in their
afterlife. In turn, the Roman culture was greatly influenced by the
Grecian concepts of death. The Romans incorporated the Greek gods
into their religion and also their notions of the afterlife. These
notions were then expanded to include different levels of the
underworld where certain types of people resided. Take for example
in Virgil s Aenied, Aeneas the main character journeys into the
underworld to visit his father. He initially arrives in a place for
lost souls and then reaches the Elysian Fields (Elysium) where
great heros, warriors, and people of talent dwell. The Roman
culture, in turn, influenced the various cultures of Europe during
the middle ages slightly before the enlightenment. The pagan
religion the Romans believed in were replaced with Christian
concepts of an afterlife, however, the notion of the underworld was
kept and modified. Once again the incorporators made the underworld
more elaborate and redifined it as Hell. In Dante Alighieri s
Divine Comedy, the first book, The Inferno, describes the
underworld with significantly more levels each of which descended
to lower levels that contained increasingly ironic and torturous
punishments. These levels corresponded to the Christian concepts of
sin and those who had commited such sins in life would be forced to
spend time being punished for them. Dante s second and third books
show that human existance is revolved around God and that good
deeds will bring people closer to perfection. One can see though
the progression of time that each culture is in some way impacted
by other cultures either directly or indirectly.
Recently, a method of dealing with the concept of death without
religion or myth has come about. Starting from Ancient Greece and
continuing though the Renaissance then accelerating and
accumilating momentum to the present, it is logical and rational
thought that has eased human fear of death. Philosophers and
critical thinkers have deduced that death is a biological
necessity. Without death the process of renewal can not be
complete. A realization of this inevitablilty and necessity has in
itself brought comfort for those who chose logic rather than faith.
This culmination began in European culture then transcended to
American culture. Thus, one can extrapolate from the growing
numbers of people who lack religious background, that the future
holds to be one without faiths. Cultural influence though religion
and concepts of the death or afterlife will become in a sense
obsolete.
Death is dealt with differently by people of different cultures,
but these cultures were in some way influenced by others of the
past and present. Judging from the current trend, the classical
methods of dealing with death such as religion and myth are
becoming subsequently less and less useful to the people of today.
People who desire a definite answer. Hence, the world of tommorow
will not be one which is dependent on preconceived notions and
limits set by the past. Such a future is boundless and exciting and
at the same time frightening. The world is in a sense shedding its
old skin to make way for the new skin. Old skin being traditional
ways of thought based on faith and the new skin being a mixture of
ancient and new arising thought based on logic and science.
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