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Reanimating grief

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This book explores how literature, theatre and music revive the dead to explore the dynamics of grief and mourning. Combining expressive and analytical writing, it offers a critical poetics of loss...
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  • 20 January 2026
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Reanimating grief is a wide-ranging study of the poetics of bereavement in theatre, literature and song. It examines the way cultural works reanimate the dead in the form of ghosts, memories or scenes of mourning, and uses critical and creative writing to express grief’s subjectivity and uniqueness. It covers classic texts from Greek tragedy and Shakespeare to works by Anton Chekhov, Samuel Beckett, Enda Walsh, Sally Rooney and Maggie O’Farrell. The book argues that the return of the dead in theatre and fiction is an act of memorial and an expression of love that illustrates the relationship between art, enchantment and impossibility.
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Price: £25.00
Pages: 208
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 20 January 2026
ISBN: 9781526194695
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

PERFORMING ARTS / Theater / History & Criticism, Literature: history and criticism, LITERARY CRITICISM / General, LITERARY CRITICISM / Drama, Theatre studies, Literary studies: plays and playwrights, Literary studies: fiction, novelists and prose writers

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Introduction
1 Genealogies of grief: classic reanimations
2 Animate objects of mourning
3 Grief, fiction, passion
4 Dead forms, living characters
5 Burying the living and the dead
6 Musical afterlives
7 Mothersongs
Conclusion. Impossible reanimations
References
Index