Fear and Denial of Death * *

*by David Wendell Moller*

*As enormous community effort goes into cleaning up areas of pornography,
litter, and dirt, such as in the recent transformation of New York City's
Times Square area, modern society spends considerable effort on disinfecting
the experience of dying. This inclination to hide and exclude death from
everyday social activity is supported by the transfer of the place of death
from home to the hospital. *

*During the second-half of the twentieth century the burden of care, once
assumed by neighbors, friends, and family, was passed onto strangers and
medical caretakers. The new sites of death which emerged, most notably the
hospital and long-term care facility, enabled the removal of unpleasant and
horrifying sights of the dying process from ordinary social and cultural
experience. This transformation, whereby death was sequestered and
institutionally confined, was attractive to a culture that was increasingly
fearful of dying. *

*In the hospital, dying is removed from the moral and social fabric of the
culture. It becomes redefined into a technical process that is
professionally and bureaucratically controlled. The horribleness and
enormous suffering of dying is banished from public visibility as it is
isolated within the professional, technical confines of the hospital. It is
also important to note that in this way the experience of dying has become
both medicalized and sequestered out-of-the-way. It has been argued that the
medicalization and isolation of dying are forms of death denial. Indeed, if
we examine the way dying and death are organized in the hospital culture, a
clear pattern of closed and obscured death awareness emerges. *

*In the modern context in which dying has lost its meaningfulness, death is
viewed as failure. This fact helps explain the great sense of shame and
humiliation that dying persons and their loved ones feel. In addition, many
physicians view death as defeat and failure on both a personal and
professional level. As long as dying is seen as shameful and death is viewed
as failure, open and honest communication will be stymied. Simply, no one
likes to talk about their shortcomings or failures. These, instead, are
remanded to the isolated, invisible realm of our collective human
experience. That is to say, they are, in fact, denied.*

*In the current cultural and medical framework, silence surrounds suffering,
dying, and death. These keenly felt human experiences are plunged deep
beneath the surface of everyday cultural activities, becoming concealed and
privatized. Norms and rituals that once helped to sustain and guide persons
through the dying process have vanished. It is precisely this devaluation of
dying as an important cultural experience that has subsumed the management
and control of dying in the technological, medical model. The crucial point
to be made is that cultural meaninglessness prompts widespread avoidance and
denial, and that the cultural campaign to deny death is waged largely within
the strictures of technological medicine.*

*Yet, despite the widespread cultural inclination to avoid open
confrontation, there may be reason to believe that death is not actually
denied as much as some have claimed. In the first place, death has been a
topic of increasing attention in academia and in popular literature.
Scholars who have written, during the past two decades, about the American
ways of death denial have contributed to a growing body of professional
literature. The presence of this literature, some of it even publicly
visible on the shelves of bookstores, mitigates denial. Slowly but surely,
thanatology courses on college campuses began to emerge. Textbooks began to
proliferate during the 1980s. Movies and plays began to tackle the
culturally taboo topics of suffering and dying. Self-help and support groups
have burgeoned. *

*An entire genre of popular, self-help literature on grief has emerged --
some of which, ironically in this age of denial, became best sellers. More
recently, newspapers, television, and magazines have catapulted Jack
Kevorkian into the mainstream of cultural conversation. National Public
Radio has produced an excellent series on end-of-life care. Funeral homes
advertise in the Yellow Pages, and more recently have advertised their
services on the previously forbidden medium of television. A "dying well,"
palliative care movement is beginning to take form within the profession of
medicine. Death, it seems, is slowly creeping out of the closet and assuming
a somewhat visible status in an otherwise death-denying environment.*

*Thus, it would appear that the American relationship to death and dying is
changing. Avoidance and denial seem to coexist with a newly fashioned thrust
toward openness. The evolution of this relationship between "avoidance" and
"acceptance" requires further contemplation. The key point to consider is
whether or not the thanatology movement, with its focus on dignity and
openly acknowledging death as a vital part of the human experience,
represents a transformation of attitudes or is a recasting of the American
framework of denial into a new form. *

*In primitive societies, ritual and ceremony were heavily relied upon to
shield individuals and their community from evil and death. These rituals
were connected to the ways of life and provided for cosmic meaning to
suffering and the end of life. These rituals eased the terror of death, and
enabled individuals to confront dying with courage and reassurance
throughout the ages. Thus, the seeming absence of fear was in fact a
reduction and control of fear by cultural intervention. *

*Traditional rituals and meanings generated an atmosphere of openness that
eased the terror of death and offered solace to dying individuals. According
to Becker, however, the terror of death would not remain submerged
indefinitely. It would return with a fury if traditional rituals and meaning
dissipated, as he argues is the case in the contemporary world. E. Becker
(author, Escape From Evil and The Structure of Evil) argues that modern
rituals have become hollow and unsatisfying. As a result, modern individuals
are deprived of stable, meaningful life rituals, and have become
increasingly "confused," "impotent," and "empty" during both their lives and
deaths.*

*In light of Becker's criticism of the organization of modern life, it is
important to pose the following question: What is it that makes humanity
empty, confused, and impotent in the contemporary setting? His answer and
mine are quite similar. It is because the meanings of life and death in the
materialistic, technologically driven society have become shallow, thereby
precipitating enormous insecurities and anxieties. One does not have to look
too far to see how complaints of personal unease and worry permeate the
culture. And, this widespread base of anxiety in living becomes exacerbated
into a deep dread and anguish when individuals are forced to confront the
end of life. *

*According to Becker, greed, power, and wealth have become the modern
response to vulnerability and insecurity inherent in the human condition.
They provide for a base of honor in our materialistic society, and generate
an illusion of omnipotence and immorality. Becker takes this argument to its
logical extreme, and asserts that the dread of death and emptiness of life
in the twentieth century have been responsible for cultivating unprecedented
evil through the pursuit of greed, power, and the associated development of
destructive capabilities.*

*Thus, for Becker, the stupidity and inhumanity of humanity lies in the
nature of our social arrangements. In the modern context, new patterns of
death denial have emerged and have become dangerous and dehumanizing. Up to
a point, traditional cultures creatively designed rituals to "deny" death,
and these rituals enriched the life of the community. In the absence of
meaning systems and rituals, modern society has exploded onto a dangerous
and irrational course; shallowness and emptiness have created a crisis of
legitimacy. *

*In this regard, the argument of Becker is remarkably similar to Moore and
others who have made the case that one of the great afflictions of modern
life is spiritual emptiness and soullessness. Narcissism, self-seeking
materialism, and heroic use of science and technology have become prominent
forces that shape daily life. In this environment of self-glorification,
material gratification, and extraordinary technological achievement,
suffering, dying, and death are pushed to the periphery of cultural
experience. Individuals are seduced into believing the illusion that, in
this cultural context of denial, the facts of death and suffering are
inconsequential to their daily, personal lives.*

*Materialism is a prominent value in American life. Becker makes the
argument that the evolution of capitalism as an economic and social system
is a modern form of death denial. That is to say, in capitalism it is
through the thrill of acquisition and the pursuit of wealth that human
frailty is overcome. Power accrues as wealth and possessions amass, and
wealth endows immortality as it is passed on to one's heirs. Narcissism,
another prominent fact of American cultural life, is also related to the
denial of death. In an age of individualism, we become hopelessly absorbed
with ourselves. Although we know that death is an unavoidable reality,
narcissism facilitates the self-delusion that practically everyone else is
expendable, except ourselves. In this era of individualism, the death of
oneself becomes increasingly inconceivable. When one matters more than
anything or anyone else, self-absorption does not allow for the possibility
that one will no longer exist. In this way, the deeper we plunge into
narcissistic, self-admiration and idolization, the more we become oblivious
to our inevitable fate. As a culture, the more oblivious we become, the more
unable we are to face up to the facts of death in our daily activities.
Death is accordingly hidden and denied.*

*Thus, the social organization of modern life precipitates widespread
oblivion and denial:*

* *

*Modern man is drinking and drugging himself out of awareness, or he spends
his time shopping (or admiring and entertaining himself), which is the same
thing. As awareness (of our common human condition) calls for types of
heroic dedication that his culture no longer provides for him, society
continues to help him forget *[E. Becker/ Escape From Evil, The Free Press,
New York, 1975, pp. 81-82]*.*

Fear of Dying or Fear of Death? * *

*There is a difference between fear of dying and fear of death, but the two
are generally lumped together in the literature. It may very well be that
modern individuals do not fear death as much as they fear dying. In some
cases, death may even be seen as a welcome release from intolerable
suffering, looked forward to, or actively sought in order to relieve
suffering. *

*In a culture where systems of support are fractured and dwindled,
individualism is a prized value, and technology is a dominant force, the
great cultural fear of death may more precisely be a fear of dying -- in
isolation, indignity, and meaninglessness. It may be that while death itself
does frighten, greater terror resides in the ways of dying that are
presently so undignified and dehumanized. The denigration of personhood and
dignity, coupled with unrelieved suffering, may be what is most intolerable
about death in modern society. Thus, it is not necessarily the ending of
life that precipitates the most fear. Rather, it may be the way in which
life ends. *

*The decimation of personhood and dignity are primary sources of worry and
frustration for dying persons. The fear of dying is intensified because
dying persons are defiled, stigmatized, and relegated to the role of second
class citizens. Thus, on a societal level, fear and denial do not mean the
complete avoidance of death, but more correctly refer to the medicalization
of death which has redefined the dying process into a low status, technology
intensive, and potentially contaminating situation that needs to be
contained and sanitized.*

*Dying persons create a problem for the culture and the practice of medicine
by their lingering, often refectory pressure. This lingering is typically
full of chaos and suffering which are inherent to the messy, ugly image of
contemporary death. Even the very term lingering, which would have been
inapplicable to the life experience of dying persons fifty years ago,
carries a negative, frightening connotation. Yet, the term itself offers
insight into the nature and course of the dying experience in our
technologically dependent culture and medical systems.*

*Societies, even modern societies, do not entirely deny death. Rather, they
organize for it in ways that exert forms of social control. They sanction
different kinds of myths, rituals, and strategies that determine the nature
of death and set in motion culturally validated processes of conflict,
reintegration, and adjustment of roles. In the process of organizing for
death, modern society seeks to control, manage, and contain the process of
dying in ways that least disturbs the functioning of the ongoing cultural
and social systems. Thus, although I have used and will continue to use the
term denial in describing the modern ways of death, I use it in this
sociologically qualified way. Death is not, nor ever has it been, produced
out of existence. Rather, it is "denied" by social and cultural forces in
that it is restrained, managed, and kept under control.*

*In this regard, when we reconfigure our contemplation of mortality, from
the all encompassing concept of denial to the more specific concept of
controlling and containing death, the seeming contradiction between
America's orientation toward death-denial and the recent movement toward
death awareness can be readily reconciled.*

*The pioneer of the death-awareness movement is Elisabeth Kubler-Ross. With
the publication of On Death and Dying in 1969, she brought the issue of
death out of the closet and into the mainstream of cultural conversation.
Ironically, in a culture of "denial" where issues of death and dying
received such scant attention, her book received widespread recognition. It
begins with a tone of lament in which she criticizes the technological
underpinnings of modern death -- loneliness, mechanization, dehumanization,
and impersonalization. In fairly straightforward language she portrays how
gruesome dying could be, and how medical treatment of dying persons is often
missing compassion and sensitivity. She contrasted how dying persons may cry
out for peace, rest, recognition of their sufferings, and dignity, but
receive instead infusions, transfusions, invasive procedures, and
technologically-driven plans of action. Her contrast struck a cord with the
American public, which was becoming increasingly worried about the
indignities in dying. *

*Throughout her book there is reference to the idea of death-with-dignity.
She zealously advocates the proposition that dying need not be something
terrible and tragic, but could become a springboard for courage, growth,
enrichment and even joy. She offers a rather uncomplicated view of the
serenity, acceptance, and personal courage that can be achieved in the stage
of acceptance. Her rather simple and facile view of dignity and how it could
be obtained was embraced as a source of comfort in a society that was
becoming fearful of the indignities of technological death. In many ways,
the appeal of her message was directly related to its simplicity and
optimism. In short, it offered an uncomplicated solution to a troubling and
complicated problem.*

*The thrust of Kubler-Ross' message is two pronged. It stresses the
humanistic feat of achieving dignity throughout dying. It also argues that
death is not the cessation of life. Rather, it is the transition of life
from earthly existence to unearthly, spiritual life. In either event,
however, her message offers comfort. It facilitates control over death:
either in its transformation of dying into an opportunity for growth and
dignity or in its resurrection of physical death into a spiritual life --
eternity.*

*Both the humanistic and spiritual essence of her manifesto on death and
dying have had an enormous impact on shaping the thanatology revolution of
the past three decades. The publication of On Death and Dying, and the
pictorial interview in the November 20, 1969 issue of LIFE magazine
catapulted Kubler-Ross into fame and national attention. Personal
appearances on television, coverage in local and national newspapers and
magazines including an interview in Playboy, coupled with her charismatic
personality and outstanding skills as a communicator, quickly established
her as the nation's leading authority on the care of the dying. Although she
was only minimally involved with hands-on-care of dying patients and the
development of hospice programs in America, the name of Kubler-Ross became
synonymous with death and dying. In recent history, she has served as the
dominant spokesperson for the needs of dying persons, and served as a
pioneering advocate for dignified death. It is fair to say that more than
anyone else, she has been responsible for the development of the death
awareness movement which systematically over the past thirty years has
sought to eliminate the long-standing cultural taboo about matters of
suffering, dying, and death.*

*Ironically, despite the fact that America was and remains suffering and
death aversive, the culture was ready for "Kubler-Ross' thanatology
movement." In an era of individualism, her view of death as a final stage of
growth was consistent with the broader cultural value of self-actualization.
The human potential movement, with its orientation toward therapeutic
intervention and personal transcendence, helped to set the stage for
therapeutic management and control of the dying process. It is in this way
that hospices, while a direct structural product of the death-awareness
movement, are also a structural reflection of the underlying American value
of individualism and self-actualization. Contrary to the life-prolonging
focus of medicalized dying, hospices seek palliative, humanistic, and
spiritual alternatives. As a philosophy and system of care, they seek to
reclaim the solace and support that were provided by the rituals and
patterns of traditional ways of death.*

*The essential point to recognize is twofold. First, the denial of death
through relentless technological management of dying individuals is vastly
different in its approach, goals, and consequences than the forms of care
sought by the death-with-dignity, hospice movement. Second, despite their
apparent differences, each of these responses to the problem of death is
driven by a desire to control and manage the dying process. It is my
contention that technological intervention and the pursuit of dignity have
both become new icons and rituals of death control in the modern context.
Just as traditional Western society organized to make death palatable
through community presence, religious rituals, and cultural ceremonies,
modern society seeks to master death through patterns of control and
governance that are consistent with broader folkways of life; namely,
technological reliance and therapeutic amelioration.*

**This article is excerpted from *Life's End*, (c)2000, by Baywood Publishing
Co., Inc. Reprinted with permission of the publisher, Baywood Publishing Co,
Inc. www.baywood.com

 *Info/Order this
book*<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0895032023/innerselfcom>
*.*
------------------------------
* *

*About the Author*

**David Wendell Moller teaches sociology in the School of Liberal Arts,
where he is also chair of the Program in Medical Humanities and Health
Studies. Moller is a faculty member of the Program in Medical Ethics at
Indiana University School of Medicine. His resolution to making death and
dying less horrendous led him to a position on faculty of the Palliative
Care Program at Wishard Hospital, Indiana University School of Medicine.


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