Death
Ah Puchdeity of doom; represented as bloated corpse or skeleton. [Maya Myth.: Leach, 30]
Ankougaunt driver of spectral cart; collects the dead. [Brittany Folklore: Leach, 62]
Anubisgod and guardian of the dead. [Ancient Egyptian Rel.: Parrinder, 10]
Arrow of Azraelangel of death’s way of summoning dead. [Islamic Myth.: Jobes, 129]
As I Lay DyingBundren family ordeal after Addie’s death. [Am. Lit.: Faulkner As I Lay Dying]
asphodel flowerbloom growing in Hades. [Gk. Myth.: Kravitz, 37]
AtroposFate who cuts thread of life. [Gk. and Rom. Myth.: Hall, 302]
Azraelangel of death; separates the soul from the body. [Islamic Myth.: Walsh Classical, 41]
bansheefemale specter, harbinger of death. [Irish and Welsh Myth.: Walsh Classical, 45]
bellpassing bell; rung to indicate demise. [Christian Tradition: Jobes, 198]
blackWestern color for mourning. [Christian Color Symbolism: Leach, 242; Jobes, 357]
Bodach Glasgray specter; equivalent to Irish banshee. [Scot. Myth.: Walsh Classical, 45]
Brangod whose cauldron restored dead to life. [Welsh Myth.: Jobes, 241]
Bury the Deadsix dead soldiers cause a rebellion when they refuse to be buried. [Am. Drama: Haydn & Fuller, 768]
Calvary(Golgotha) where Christ was crucified. [N.T.: Luke 23:33]
Cergoddess of violent death. [Gk. Myth.: Kravitz, 75]
Charungod of death. [Etruscan Myth.: Jobes, 315]
Conqueror Wormthe worm ultimately vanquishes man in grave. [Am. Lit.: “Ligeia” in Tales of Terror]
Dance of DeathHolbein woodcut, one of many medieval examples of the death motif. [Eur. Culture: Bishop, 363-367]
danse macabreDance of Death; procession of all on their way to the grave. [Art: Osborne, 299–300, 677]
dust and ashes“I am become like dust and ashes.” [O.T.: Job 30:19]
Endgameblind and chair-bound, Hamm learns that nearly everybody has died; his own parents are dying in separate trash cans. [Anglo-Fr. Drama: Beckett Endgame in Weiss, 143]
Ereshkigalgoddess of death; consort of Nergal. [Sumerian and Akkadian Myth.: Parrinder, 93]
extreme unctionRoman Catholic sacrament given to a person in danger of dying. [Christianity: RHD, 506]
Gibbs, Emilydying in childbirth, welcomed by the other spirits in the graveyard, she tries to relive her twelfth birthday. [Am. Drama: Thornton Wilder Our Town in Benét, 747]
Grim Reapername given to personification of death. [Pop. Culture: Misc.]
handful of earthsymbol of mortality. [Folklore: Jobes, 486]
horsesymbol of agents of destruction. [Christian Tradition: N.T.: Revelation 6; Mercatante, 65]
Ilyitch, Ivanafflicted with cancer, he becomes irritable, visits many doctors, gradually disintegrates, and dies almost friendless. [Russ. Lit.: Tolstoy The Death of Ivan Ilyitch in Magill III, 256]
KaliHindu goddess to whom Thug sacrificed victims. [Hinduism: Brewer Dictionary, 600]
Krookrag dealer dies spectacularly and horribly of “spontaneous combustion.” [Br. Lit.: Dickens Bleak House]
Lenore“saintly soul floats on the Stygian river.” [Am. Lit.: “Lenore” in Hart, 468]
Lord of the Fliesshowing man’s consciousness and fear of dying. [Br. Lit.: Lord of the Flies]
manesspirits of the dead. [Rom. Rel.: Leach, 672]
Maniaancient Roman goddess of the dead. [Rom. Myth.: Zimmerman, 159]
Niflheimdark, cold region to which were sent those who died of disease or old age. [Scand. Myth.: Brewer Dictionary 642]
nightingaleidentified with mortality. [Animal Symbolism: Mercatante, 163]
On Borrowed Timean old man chases “Death” up a tree and keeps him there until the old man is ready to die. [Am. Drama: Sobel, 517]
pale horsefourth horse of Apocolypse, ridden by Death personified. [N.T.: Revelation 7:7–8]
Pardoner’s Tale, Theseeking to slay death, three rioters are told he is under a certain tree; there they find gold and kill each other over it. [Br. Lit.: Chaucer “The Pardoner’s Tale” in Canterbury Tales]
Requiemreligious mass (music or spoken) for the dead. [Christianity: Payton, 568]
“Rime of the Ancient Mariner, The”when Death wins the toss of the dice, the two hundred crew members drop dead. [Br. Poetry: Coleridge “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”]
Sacco Benedettoyellow robe worn going to the stake during Inquisition. [Span. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 948]
scythecarried by the personification of death, used to cut life short. [Art.: Hall, 276]
skeletonvisual representation of death. [Western Folklore: Cirlot, 298]
skullrepresentation of body’s dissolution. [Christian Symbolism: Appleton, 92]
skull and crossbonessymbolizing mortality; sign on poison bottles. [World Culture: Brewer Dictionary, 1009]
Styxriver which must be crossed to enter Hades. [Gk. Myth.: Howe, 259]
Thanatos(Mors) god of death; brother of Somnos (sleep). [Gk. Myth.: Gayley, 54]
Thothrecord-keeper of the dead. [Egyptian Myth.: Leach, 1109]
Valdemar, M.in hypnotic trance, recounts impressions from other side of death. [Am. Lit.: “The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar” in Portable Poe, 268–280]
viaticumEucharist given to one who is dying. [Christianity: Brewer Dictionary, 1128]
Allusions—Cultural, Literary, Biblical, and Historical: A Thematic Dictionary. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.
Death
the cessation of the vital functions of an organism and the ensuing end of its life as an individual. Death is accompanied by the decomposition of proteins and other biopolymers, which are the principal material substrate of life. Modern views of dialectic materialism on the subject of death are based on the following idea expressed by F. Engels: “One can no longer consider scientific a physiology that does not regard death as an essential aspect of life … or realize that the negation of life is an essential component of life: life must always be viewed in relation to its inevitable and immanent property—death” (K. Marx and F. Engels, Soch., 2nd ed., vol. 20, p. 610).
Sometimes the concept of partial death is proposed, that is, the death of a group of cells or of an organ or part of an organ. In unicellular organisms, or protozoa, the natural death of an individual is manifested by division; when the individual ceases its existence, two new individuals come into being to take its place. In the case of other organisms, death marks the definitive conclusion of the organism’s life, usually leading to the formation of a corpse.
In higher animals and man, death is termed natural or physiological when it results from prolonged, gradual extinction of the organism’s main vital functions. Premature, or pathological, death results from disease or from lesions of such vital organs as the brain, heart, lungs, and liver. Premature death may be sudden; it may occur within a few minutes or even seconds, as in myocardial infarction. Violent death may be caused by an accident, suicide, or murder.
The death of warm-blooded animals and man is caused mainly by the cessation of respiration and blood circulation. The two main stages of death are, successively, clinical death and biological or true death. Complete restoration of vital functions is possible during clinical death, but biological death involves an irreversible cessation of physiological processes in the cells and tissues. The discipline of thanatology studies the processes associated with death.
REFERENCES
Metchnikoff, E. Etiudy optimizma, 4th ed. Moscow, 1917.
Shmal’gauzen, I. I. Problema smerti i bessmertiia. Moscow-Leningrad, 1926.
Il’in, N. A. Sovremennaia nauka o zhizni i smerti. Kishinev, 1955.
Lunts, A. M. “Ob evoliutsii smerti v sviazi s evoliutsiei razmnozheniia.” Zhurnal obshchei biologii, 1961, vol. 22, no. 2.
Policard, A., and M. Bessis. Elementy patologii kletki. Moscow, 1970. (Translated from French.)The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.