Mourning and digital culture
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Or the projects might be purely virtual. As Valentina Culatti at Neural puts it, "Just as the Web has changed long-established rituals of flirting and socializing, personal Web pages on social networking sites like MySpace are altering the rituals of mourning."
The practice of turning the MySpace page of a deceased user into a virtual gravestone has spawned a Web site focused on aggregating information about the deceased. Yourdeathspace, started 2 years ago, is simply a "collection of dead MySpace users." MyDeathSpace aggregates links to deceased MySpace users' pages, news stories, obituaries or blogs that detail their lives as well as how they died. Behavior researchers at the University of South Florida apparently follow its development to get insight into the psychosocial effects that social networks might have on youth, and whether online memorials and forums that focus on death encourage teen suicides or comfort those grieving. Researcher Ilene Berson says that the Internet lacks policing efforts similar to those at newspapers and broadcast outlets, where news stories about suicides are sometimes subdued. The website has unsurprisingly stirred controversy for what some perceive as an irreverence towards the dead. However it is inevitable that as the Internet becomes a bigger part of our lives, it will become a place (the place?) we'll go to pay our respects.
Image. Update: Bright reports that a Dutch company, Uitvaart, has opened a crematorium on Second Life (image on the right.) |
I'm currently investigating the way new media artist and designers explore mourning, its rituals and the ways to keep some form of life after death (any suggestion from readers is more than welcome.) It can translate into physical artefacts such as in Shiho Fukuhara and Georg Tremmel's famous project 
This exploration into mourning and digital culture is still in an embryonic state. For example, i lack information about how it translates into the game world so i'd be happy to hear of any piece of information you could give me on the subject.
Hi!
Just FYI - One thing I'm doing with my brother, who is orthodox monk - prayer paid by virtual monies. www.sorokoust.ru. it is only in Russian, but we work on improving.
Another thing I plan to do - documenting graves with "document-like" paper with, in addition to names/dates etc - (a) picture of the grave and (b) GPS coordinates of it. Looks like nobody mashed those technologies yet.
There's a slowly starting project to write a wikipedia entry on cemeteries... Just not to loose those places.
It was fun at 22C3 :)
Wired Magazine recently had an article on some MySpace murders and the online mourning that followed.
I definitely recommend it:
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.12/murderblog.html?pg=1&topic=murderblog&topic_set=
Hi,
you can add to your list, the Book of the Dead, online artwork about the last trip where people can write their own story. It had been realized by two net artists : Gerard Dalmon and Xavier Malbreil. *
The URL is www.livresdesmorts.com.
Xamax
Hello,
I made a website as a symbol of mourning, hope and resistance as a response to the Madrid bombings on 11-M. It´s a type of digital mourning, of connecting to the people. If you are interested let me know and I can explain the project further!
Regards,
Marco.
.. of course, it helps if I add the link:
http://www.unaflorpormadrid.com
M.
OMG..The first picture was taken by our raid leader in World of Warcraft... And our guild's name "��神殿" may now have seen by more than millions of people.
And the picture was taken from a funeral in the game which for one of our friends in WoW. He died of cancer, in the real world.