
About this episode
This episode discusses the significance of grave goods and the emotional attachment to possessions in the context of death.
“Riches do not so much exhilarate us with their possession, as they torment us with their loss.” This quotation comes from Robert Burton, a 17th century Oxford scholar and clergyman who understood that our attachment to possessions is often less about enjoying them and more about dreading their loss. This dread, or as he describes it, torment, persists for some in the face of death. In this episode, I’ll be talking to third year Wake Forest Law Student Grace Mohlin about grave goods. As she explains, everyday people insist on being buried with items from this life – expensive jewelry, sentimental objects, and, as we’ll learn later, powder blue convertibles – not because they can take it with them (as we know, “there are no pockets in a shroud”), but because the idea of leaving them behind is somehow unbearable. But sometimes an object matters just as much, if not, even more, to the living then it does to the deceased. Imagine a person owning papers or artwork of historical significance. During their live, they have every right to destroy these things, no matter how much society might lament their loss. But death changes this dynamic. When someone demands an object be buried with…
People in this episode
Host: Tanya D. Marsh
Guest: Grace Mohlin
Topics covered
- grave goods
- death
- burial practices
- material possessions
- cultural significance
Keywords
- grave goods
- burial
- death
- material possessions
- Robert Burton
- Wake Forest Law
- cultural significance
Mentioned in this episode
Organizations: Wake Forest Law
More episodes of Death, et seq.
- Episode 46: Demystifying End of Life Planning Documents · April 27, 2026 · 20 min
- Episode 45: Empathy and End of Life with Stephanie Hopp · April 21, 2026 · 53 min
- Episode 44: The Strange Case of Jeremy DeWitte · April 13, 2026 · 26 min
- Episode 43: Regulating the Funeral Industry · April 6, 2026 · 30 min
- Episode 42: Green Burial with Suzanne Kelly · March 30, 2026 · 37 min
- Episode 39: Evidentiary Body Parts · March 16, 2026 · 35 min
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