Highway to Heaven: the cosmology of the Roadside Memorial

Author(s)
Franzmann, Majella Maria
Publication Date
2007
Abstract
In the hinterland of the Gold Coast in Queensland, Australia, there is a roadside memorial with a cross, the vertical stake of which has a doorknob fixed to the top. Below it are the words: 'the door to heaven is now open Scotty RIP'. This memorial makes explicit what many roadside memorials seem to imply - that the death of a loved one has opened a passage, both for the dead to another reality, and for the living to communicate with the dead. Such an idea rests on an underlying cosmology that can be found in many of the world's religions. In the Australian context, the idea is most likely borrowed from the dominant Judeo-Christian Western religious or cultural information that informs the life of those who erect the memorials. At the same time, this borrowing may be entirely unconscious and the source unrecognised. The memorials are the means by which people engage with loss, with grief, with processes of remembering and mourning. These activities are not of themselves necessarily religious, but the language, symbolism and paraphernalia of the memorials are overwhelmingly so.
Citation
Roadside Memorials: A Multidisciplinary Approach, p. 173-180
ISBN
9780957700932
Link
Language
en
Publisher
EMU Press
Title
Highway to Heaven: the cosmology of the Roadside Memorial
Type of document
Conference Publication
Entity Type
Publication

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