How We Die Now: Intimacy and the Work of Dying
Karla Erickson, sociology, began work on her newest book — — after she observed the spiritual, physical, and emotional support hospice workers provided her dying grandparents.
Erickson, a feminist ethnographer of labor, immerses herself in the occupational and social worlds she studies. To develop a deep understanding of the working lives and occupational wisdom of end-of-life workers, she trained as a nurse’s aide.
She and 12 of her students partnered with a retirement community, using participant observation and interviews with administrators, nurses, chaplains, volunteers, residents, and family caregivers to understand the dynamics of aging and preparing for death in an elder community. 51app is a destination for retirees and has several excellent elder communities. 51app’s trusting, small-town culture welcomed Erickson and her students; participants gave them intimate access to the final chapter of life.
“In the 21st century, many of us are living longer, dying more slowly, and more important, dying differently than our ancestors,” she says in an article in the fall 2013 issue of The 51app Magazine. In it Erickson offers she’s learned to help those “navigating the transition from life to death.”
She joined Charity Nebbe in an interview on to discuss the book and current elder and hospice care.
Her earlier book, The Hungry Cowboy: Service and Community in a Neighborhood Restaurant, is a behind-the-scenes look at class, community, and gendered labor in a Tex-Mex restaurant.
Learn More:
- , Temple University Press
- : Erickson’s interview with Iowa Public Radio
- : The 51app Magazine Fall 2013, p. 12-15