Welcome

spacer

photo by Tomas Valenzula Blejer

Digital Death Day 2011 Europe will be November 11, 2011.

9am to 4:30 at the TropenMuseum

Registration IS Open.

BEAUTIFUL LONG FORM INVITATION

DEATH IS A PART OF LIFE AND LIFE HAS (TO AN EXTENT) BECOME DIGITAL.
Our increasing digitality means that we will increasingly be forced to come FACE to SCREEN with the various dimensions and complexities of Digital Death.
Held in the inspiring setting of the Tropenmuseum’s exhibition Death Matters, this conference will be primarily concerned with provoking discourse around the social, cultural and practical implications of Death in the Digital world.
Thus stimulating a reconsideration of how death, mourning, memories and history are currently being augmented in our technologically mediated society.
‘We hardly know what life is how can we hope to understand death?’ -Chinese sage Confucius (fifth century BC)

IF YOU ARE A:

  • Funeral Director
  • Thanatologist
  • Social Network Admin
  • Data Systems Admin
  • Product Manager
  • Information Systems Researcher
  • HCI Researcher
  • Digital Designer
  • Psychologist or Grief Counselor
  • Palliative Care Specialist
  • Historian
  • Pre-Need Sales Person
  • Funeral Celebrant
  • Estate Planner
  • Legacy Planner
  • End of Life Planner
  • Solicitors and Barristers in Intellectual Property and Estate Law
  • Clergy OR
  • Simply an Interested Human Being

THEN THIS IS THE CONFERENCE FOR YOU!
The format will be an open space un-conference with attendees creating the agenda and proposing sessions at the start. If you have a presentation, question, answer or particular interest you can propose a session at.

ABOUT THE TROPENMUSEUM
The Tropenmuseum presents, researches and encourages knowledge about and exchange between cultures. It offers a wide and varied audience an experience that utilises every form of museum presentation: exhibitions, collections and expertise, publications, the historic building, educational and other activities. The Royal Tropical Institute’s museum is active internationally in the field of culture and development.

DEATH MATTERS @ THE TROPENMUSEUM
Death Matters shows how people deal with death in different parts of the world. How they mourn and commemorate: whether privately or openly, soberly or exuberantly, alone or communally. Various forms of leave-taking, mourning and commemorating are presented in the exhibition. These reveal much about what people think about life, death and the hereafter. Besides objects, personal stories and films, Death Matters also features recent work by international artists such as Marina Abramovic, Yang Jiechang, Jan Fabre, Carlos Amorales and Krien Clevis referring to various cultural traditions connected with death.SOME

QUESTION WE HOPE WILL BE RAISED BY THE EVENT:

  • What does this change mean for loved ones of the departed?
  • What does it mean for professionals in end of life care and post mortem services?
  • How does it change the way online tools and social networks are constructed and the service providers ‘terms and conditions’?
  • What are the new forms of estate and legacy planning?
  • What does this mean for governments in terms of archiving, digital heritage and the collection of public records?
  • What businesses are serving this ‘new’ market and what do these businesses have to offer?

PUBLIC TRANSPORT
Accessible by tram 3, 7, 9, 10, 14 and bus 22

TROPENMUSEUM
Linnaeusstraat 2, 1092 CK Amsterdam

If you are interested in participating in the community, please join the mailing list by clicking the link -> subscribe here .

We have had 2 Digital Death Days in 2010:
* #1 in Bay Area in May 2010 – Link
* #2 in London in October 2010  - Link
* #3 in Bay Area in May 2011 Link

Posted by jen at 3:23 pm

6 Responses to “Welcome”

  1. spacer
    Melissa Stewart says:
    October 5, 2010 at 12:47 am

    I wish I could come to this as a representative of a very wired natural burial ground company but can’t make it sadly. I’d have something to say about how we use the internet as a green burial business. We run closed Facebook groups for the friends and families of our burial grounds (one group per burial ground). They are popular and people use them to post photos and talk to each other about the person they lost. We also use the groups to arrange events and discuss ideas such as ‘what do you all think of the new gate’ etc. We had a picnic at Hundy Mundy on 15th August where the families met up which was arranged, in part, virally by the younger ‘facebook’ generation telling the older ones about it and also by letter and email. We also have a page for Native Woodland and a group ‘Natural Burial in the UK’ which we use for discussion and market research. We use Survey Monkey for that too.

    Our website www.greenburialgrounds.com , as well as being a business tool, is is a fountain of information with links to most of the websites you’d ever need on the subjects of death, coffins, bereavement, online memorials etc.

    And we tweet!

  2. spacer
    stephen foley says:
    October 10, 2010 at 1:19 pm

    unfortunately I was unable to take part in this important event
    the Book of Remembrance is increasingly available on line and condolence sites can be helpful to families searching for the right words for the Book inscription Maybe now the emphasis is shifting and the digital presence is taking over …..

  3. spacer
    Maria says:
    February 24, 2011 at 5:33 am

    Hello My name is Maria and I am a media and visual anthropologist in Berlin.
    My master thesis is about the Digital Death and I am really curious about the conferences and the events.
    Is it possible to contact me and give me more information about them?
    I would really appreciate it. My email is papaki83@hotmail.com
    Thanks a lot
    Maria

  4. spacer
    nagesh says:
    March 16, 2011 at 1:38 am

    wish I could come to this as a representative of a very wired natural burial ground company but can’t make it sadly. I’d have something to say about how we use the internet as a green burial business. We run closed Facebook groups for the friends and families of our burial grounds (one group per burial ground). They are popular and people use them to post photos and talk to each other about the person they lost. We also use the groups to arrange events and discuss ideas such as ‘what do you all think of the new gate’ etc. We had a picnic at Hundy Mundy on 15th August where the families met up which was arranged, in part, virally by the younger ‘facebook’ generation telling the older ones about it and also by letter and email. We also have a page for Native Woodland and a group ‘Natural Burial in the UK’ which we use for discussion and market research. We use Survey Monkey for that too

  5. spacer
    Richard says:
    March 25, 2011 at 2:10 am

    Have you thought about including archivists in your catagories of interested people. They are more than historians and are doing significant work in this area. In particular with insight of what to store and how to store it for the long term.

  6. spacer
    Charles Matthews says:
    May 4, 2011 at 12:16 pm

    As a senior analyst in a large Fortune 500 company, I have had occasion to purge the resources left by employees who pass away while on company business or who retire from the company. In one instance, it was important to determine what resources were to be retained as part of company records and what might need to be archived and given to the spouse. There are a number of ethical concerns for those in a corporate environment, and companies would do well to have a policy to handle the eventuality of death in the work place. Thank you for addressing a good portion of this concern in this forum.

© 2011 Digital Death Day Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha
gipoco.com is neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its contents. This is a safe-cache copy of the original web site.