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    AN EXAMINATION OF THE DEATH AND DYING OF COMPANION ANIMALS

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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2018
    Author
    Defibaugh, Amy
    Advisor
    Bregman, Lucy
    Committee member
    Levitt, Laura, 1960-
    White, Sydney Davant
    Levine, Judith Adrienne, 1965-
    Department
    Religion
    Subject
    Religion
    Animal Sciences
    Ethics
    Companion Animals
    Death and Dying Studies
    Human-animal Studies
    Mourning
    Pets
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/1065
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/1047
    Abstract
    “An Examination of the Death and Dying of Companion Animals” explores the human-animal relationship as enacted in the home by becoming interspecies families. In particular, these relationships are considered when companion animals are dying and in need of special care and attention. This work provides historical and cultural context for how humans attend to animals in death and dying through the history of pet keeping and a complex literature review to explore the intersections of death and dying and religion, and human-animal studies. Specifically, models for companion animal end-of-life care replicate those services for humans by providing palliative care and a myriad of other treatments to attend to the suffering of aging and terminal pets. In addition to examining the creation of companion animal hospice and how it has quickly grown since the early 2000s, this work also confronts questions of euthanasia as a burdensome decision-making process. The decision to euthanize a loved one is fraught with ambiguity, uncertainty, and, at times, guilt. These experiences are idiosyncratic and by creating a discourse and popular platform through which to share these instances of death and dying, this project contributes to the newly established death positivity movement in drawing attention to caring for dead bodies in the home. This project ends by exploring after-death-care for companion animals. Burial and cremation are still, for the most part, how human families dispose of companion animal bodies. In addition to these more traditional forms of disposition, companion humans are also starting to preserve their companion animal bodies through taxidermy and freeze-drying. Though still considered grotesque by many companion humans, companion animal body preservation is just one example of new and reimagined mourning rituals. It is through these rituals and the recognition of this particular grief that the human-animal relationship in the home is seen in a new, complicated, ambiguous and intimate light.
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