A grief that cannot be shared: Continuing relationships with aborted fetuses in contemporary Vietnam

Kirjoittajat

  • Anthony Heathcote The University of Adelaide, Australia

Abstrakti

For Vietnamese women who undergo an abortion, the deeply distressing experience can be extenuated by the stigmatisation of abortion and the disenfranchisement of grief relating to it. Abortion is a sensitive subject in Vietnam, embedded in moral ambiguities concerning youth sexual activities and the ancestral relationship the Vietnamese have with the dead. The aborted fetus is not easily reconciled with the act of ancestor worship and questions arise as to how women express their grief and if a continuing relationship should be sustained with the aborted fetus. Based on twelve months’ ethnographic research, this article contends that some Vietnamese women are continuing a relationship with their aborted fetus within the online memorial Nghia Trang Online as a way of performing ancestor worship and expressing their grief. Through the theory of durable biography and disenfranchised grief, it will be demonstrated that a continuing relationship is formed through communication and online offerings to express grief, ask for forgiveness, share past and present experiences, and through prayer and guidance for the fetus in the otherworld.

Kirjoittajan esittely

Anthony Heathcote, The University of Adelaide, Australia

Anthony Heathcote is a doctoral candidate in Anthropology at Adelaide University. He is currently completing his doctoral study on online memorialisation in contemporary Vietnam. Research interests include: media, memory and forgetting; reflexivity and online research; online memorials; religion (in particular ancestor worship) in contemporary Vietnam; war martyrs, nation-building and online commemoration in Vietnam; abortion and memorialisation in Vietnam; and the cultural construction of emotion.

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Julkaistu

2023-09-27