Journal of Socio-Cultural Studies of Khorasan

Journal of Socio-Cultural Studies of Khorasan

A Sociological Analysis of Conspicuous Consumption in Death Industry: The Case of Birjand

Authors
1 M.A. Student, Social Sciences Research, University of Birjand
2 Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Faculty of Literature and Humanities, University of Birjand, Iran
Abstract
Introduction
Death, as a multifaceted phenomenon in the social sciences, is examined through cultural, psychological, and economic lenses, carrying profound meanings across societies. In Western contexts, death rituals have shifted from traditional ceremonies to personalized, commodified practices that emphasize individuality and identity (Bryant-Jefferies, 2006; Mandel & Smeesters, 2008). Such conspicuous consumption enables individuals to symbolically address mortality and pursue desires for immortality (Zaleskiewicz et al., 2013). In contrast, in Iran—particularly in Birjand—mourning rituals are deeply rooted in religious and traditional values, maintaining a collective nature that fosters social cohesion. These rituals include elaborate ceremonies on the first, third, seventh, and fortieth days after death, marked by extensive participation of kin and lavish hospitality, differing from the Western focus on personal memorials (Khodadadi Sangdeh et al., 2014).
Cultural and economic transformations, amplified by media influence, have driven the trend toward conspicuous consumption in death rituals. Sociological theories, including agenda-setting (McCombs & Shaw, 1972), cultivation (Gerbner et al., 1986), and consumption (Baudrillard, 2016), suggest that media portrayals of lavish ceremonies elevate them as symbols of social status, promoting consumptive patterns. In Birjand, social and economic pressures compel families to organize costly rituals, resulting in both psychological and financial strain. This study sociologically analyzes Birjand residents’ inclination toward the death industry, exploring its causes, contexts, strategies, and consequences, and proposes solutions for mitigating pressures and redefining mourning practices.
 
Methodology
This research adopts a qualitative approach using the systematic grounded theory method, based on Strauss and Corbin (2016), which emphasizes deriving theory from systematically collected data without preconceived assumptions (Strauss & Corbin, 2016: 34). This method was chosen to directly investigate the phenomenon of death in real-life contexts, capturing the ritualistic and emotional shifts in Birjand’s mourning practices. Theoretical sampling was employed, involving simultaneous data collection and analysis to develop the theory (Flick et al., 2017: 138). Sixteen semi-structured interviews with organizers of lavish funeral ceremonies in Birjand were conducted until theoretical saturation was reached. Purposive and snowball sampling methods were used to select participants. Validity was ensured through rigorous execution of each stage, from data collection to analysis. Reliability was established through credibility (reflecting interviewees’ perspectives), confirmability (using credible sources), dependability (detailed coding and analysis processes), and transferability (rich descriptions of Birjand’s cultural and social context). Findings indicate that the inclination toward costly ceremonies stems from social pressures, the preservation of honor, and adherence to cultural norms, providing a robust framework for understanding this phenomenon.
 
Findings
Using grounded theory, 324 codes, 201 concepts, and 31 main categories were extracted from interviews with 16 funeral organizers in Birjand. These were analyzed within a paradigmatic model encompassing causal, contextual, and intervening conditions, as well as strategies and consequences. The central phenomenon, termed the “death industry” is shaped by causal conditions such as concern for public perception, honoring the deceased, consolidating social status, maintaining spiritual bonds, displaying identity, adapting to crises, simplifying processes, cultural influence, sustained empathy, balancing aesthetics with ritual meaning, and emotional impact. Contextual conditions include entrenched traditions, economic dynamics, social participation, and the harms associated with superficiality in mourning practices.
Identified strategies involve managing social and financial pressures, reducing costs, integrating cultural and traditional elements, resisting lavish rituals, and emphasizing spiritual solace and higher mourning objectives. However, these strategies encounter challenges such as operational difficulties, psychological stress, and financial burdens. The consequences extend across social and cultural dimensions of mourning, financial complexities, psychological and emotional effects, spiritual and religious values, transformations in ritual practices, and operational challenges. Overall, the findings indicate that the inclination toward costly ceremonies in Birjand arises from social pressures, cultural norms, and the desire to display social status, yet it also generates significant financial, psychological, and operational challenges. The results provide a comprehensive framework for understanding this phenomenon and suggest actionable solutions to mitigate associated pressures.
 
Discussion and Conclusion
The inclination of Birjand residents toward the death industry is a complex phenomenon shaped by the interplay of social, cultural, economic, and psychological factors, amplified by media influence, conspicuous consumption, and identity redefinition. Qualitative findings, grounded in interviews and supported by sociological theories, reveal that motivations such as concern for public perception, honoring the deceased, consolidating social status, maintaining spiritual bonds, and displaying identity drive families to organize costly rituals. Theories such as agenda-setting (Shaw & McCombs, 1972), cultivation (Gerbner et al., 1986), hypodermic needle (Severin & Tankard, 2001), and diffusion (Kapferer, cited in Mohammadpour et al., 2009) demonstrate how media portrayals of lavish ceremonies establish them as symbols of social prestige, thereby promoting consumptive behaviors. Likewise, theories of consumption (Baudrillard, 2016), conspicuous consumption (Veblen, cited in Bayngani et al., 2013), and habitus (Bourdieu, cited in Hamidi & Faraji, 2008) highlight families’ use of luxury services to display identity and social standing. Giddens’ theory of reflexivity (cited in Alizadeh Aghdam, 2019) further suggests that in modern societies, individuals redefine their identities through lifestyle choices, including ritual practices.
The consequences of this trend include financial pressures, psychological stress, cultural shifts in mourning practices, and operational challenges, often transforming mourning from a process of solace into one of competition. To mitigate these pressures, proposed solutions include public education to promote simplified rituals, media campaigns advocating meaningful mourning, provision of counseling and financial support services, and a stronger emphasis on cultural and religious values over superficial displays. This study provides both a theoretical and empirical framework for redefining death rituals as meaningful, cohesive practices. It offers guidance for cultural and social policymaking aimed at alleviating the burdens on bereaved families and fostering rituals that prioritize emotional healing and social solidarity.
Keywords

Subjects


References
Abdollahian, H., & Hasani, H. (2010). Tablighat-e tejari va masrafgarayi: tahlil-e neshaneh-shenakhti-ye agahi-haye tejari-ye telewiziyoni dar Iran [Commercial advertising and consumerism: A semiotic analysis of television commercials in Iran]. Communication Research, 17(62), 107–125. [In Persian]
Ahmadzadeh Kermani, R. (2011). Daramadi bar padidarshenasi-ye faza-ye majazi [An introduction to the phenomenology of cyberspace]. Media Studies, 12(6), 55–82. [In Persian]
Akhunov, A. M. (2024). Tradition or Sharia: The transformation of funeral culture in post-Soviet Tatarstan. Historical Ethnology, 9(4), 638–650.
Alizadeh Aghdam, M. (2019). Tahlil-e jame‘e-shenakhti-ye sabk-e ghazayi-ye shahrvandan-e Tabrizi [A sociological analysis of dietary patterns of Tabrizi citizens]. Social Welfare Quarterly, 12(44), 285–318. [In Persian]
Bahar, M., & Jabarpour, F. (2021). Taghirat-e a‘yin-haye soogvari-ye motofi pas az Corona va arzyabi-ye ta‘sirat-e an bar saheban-e aza [Changes in mourning rituals after Corona and assessment of their impact on the bereaved]. Religion and Communication (Imam Sadiq University / Nameh Sadiq), 28(1), 67–90. [In Persian]
Barker, Howard (2006). Plays Two. London, Oberon Books.
Baudrillard, Jean. (2016). The consumer society: Myths and structures. California: Sage Publications.
Bayangani, B., Irandoust, S. F., & Ahmadi, S. (2013). Sabk-e zendegi az manzar-e jame‘e-shenasi: Moghadame-i bar shenakht va vakavi-ye mafhum-e sabk-e zendegi [Lifestyle from a sociological perspective: An introduction to the concept of lifestyle]. Cultural Engineering, 8(77), 56–74. [In Persian]
Bryant-Jefferies, R. (2006). Counselling for death and dying: Person-centered dialogues. Radcliffe Publishing.
Creswell, J. W. (2023). Ravesh va tarh-e tahqiq-e keyfi: Entekhab az miyān-e panj roykard-e tahqiq-e keyfi [Qualitative inquiry and research design: Choosing among five approaches] (T. Hassangholipour, A. Elhiyari, & M. Barari, Trans.). Tehran: Negah-e Danesh. [In Persian]
Flick, U., Kardorff, E. von, & Steinke, I. (2018). Rahnamā-ye ravesh-e tahqiq-e keyfi [A companion to qualitative research] (S. Mohammaditalvar, Trans.). Tehran: Sociologists Publishing with Methodologists Publishing. [In Persian]
Fokouhi, N. (2007). Negahi bar roykard-e tafsiri-ye Clifford Geertz ba ta’kid bar tafsir-e u az padiyde-ye dini [A look at Clifford Geertz’s interpretive approach with emphasis on his interpretation of religion]. Journal of Sociological Studies, 15(31), 103–120. [In Persian]
Geertz, C. (2003). Eslam an gouneh ke moshahedeh kardam [Islam as I observed]. (F. Hessami, Trans.). Ma‘refat, 12(72), 88–94. [In Persian]
Gerbner, G., Gross, L., Morgan, M., & Signorielli, N. (1986). Living with television: The dynamics of the cultivation process. Perspectives on media effects, 17-40.
Ghaneirad, M. A., & Karimi Malah, M. (2006). Namayeshnameh-haye farhangi-ye marg va mordan (mored-e motale‘eh: bimaran-e saratani-ye bimarestan-e Emam Khomeini) [Cultural dramas of death and dying: A case study of Cancer patients at Imam Khomeini Hospital)]. Motale‘at-e Farhangi va Ertebatat [Cultural Studies and Communications], 2(5), 51–74. [In Persian]
Hägerstrand, T. (1965). A Monte Carlo approach to diffusion. European Journal of Sociology/Archives Européennes de Sociologie, 6(1), 43-67.
Hamid, W., & Jahangir, M. S. (2022). Dying, death and mourning amid COVID-19 pandemic in Kashmir: A qualitative study. OMEGA-journal of Death and Dying, 85(3), 690-715.
Hamid, W., Jahangir, M. S., Khan, T. A., & Maqbool, T. (2022). Role of technology in restructuring the traditional practices around death and mourning in Kashmir. Death Studies, 46(4), 832-841.
Hamidi, N., & Faraji, M. (2008). Sabk-e zendegi va poushesh-e zanan dar shahr-e Tehran [Lifestyle and women’s clothing in Tehran]. Iranian Journal of Cultural Studies, 1(1), 65–92. [In Persian]
Kiani, M., & Hashemi Nasab, F. (2021). Motale‘e-ye padidarshenasi-ye a‘yin-e soogvari dar marg-haye nashi az virus-e Corona [A phenomenological study of mourning rituals in deaths caused by the Coronavirus]. Iranian Journal of Social Studies, 14(4), 106–127. [In Persian]
Levy, S. J. (2015). Olio and integraphy as method and the consumption of death. Consumption Markets & Culture, 18(2), 133–154.
Mandel, N., & Smeesters, D. (2008). The sweet escape: The effect of mortality salience on consumption quantities for high- and low-self-esteem consumers. Journal of Consumer Research, 35(2), 309–323.
Mansouri, S. T. (2016). Motale‘e-ye keyfi-ye tajrobeh-ye do faza‘i-shode-ye karbaran-e Irani az soogvari-ye majazi dar shabake-ye ejtema‘i-ye Facebook [A qualitative study of Iranian users’ two-spatial experience of virtual mourning on Facebook] (Unpublished master’s thesis). University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran. [In Persian]
Masoudi, H., Noghani Dokht Bahmani, M., & Behravan, H. (2018). Marasem-e pishkari; nomoud-e masraf-e namayeshi-ye manasak-e ezdevaj [Pre-engagement ceremony: A display of conspicuous consumption in marriage rituals]. Quarterly of the Cultural and Social Council for Women and Family, 20(79), 87–114. [In Persian]
McCombs, M. E., & Shaw, D. L. (1972). The agenda-setting function of mass media. Public opinion quarterly, 36(2), 176-187.
Mohammadpour, A., Naqdi, A., & Nadernejad, B. (2010). Ta‘sir-e mahvare bar hoviyat-e farhangi dar Kordestan-e Iran; barrasi-ye moredi-ye daneshjuyan-e Kord-e daneshgah-haye Sanandaj [The impact of satellite television on cultural identity in Iranian Kurdistan: A case study of Kurdish students at Sanandaj universities]. Youth Studies, Culture, and Society (Special Issue on Youth and Generational Relations), (4), 131–156. [In Persian]
Movahed, M., Abbasi-Shavazi, M. T., & Marhamati, N. (2010). Resaneh, jensiyat va masrafgarā‘i (motāle‘e-ye rabete-ye estefādeh az resaneh-haye jam‘i ba tamāyolāt-e masrafgarāyāneh-ye dokhtaran va pesarān-e javan dar shahr-e Shiraz) [Media, gender, and consumerism: A study of the relationship between mass media use and consumerist tendencies of young women and men in Shiraz]. Strategic Studies on Women, 12(47), 7–40. [In Persian]
Nasiri, A. (2010). A‘yin-e sougvari va marasi dar farhang-e ‘amiyaneh-ye qom-e Lor [Mourning rituals and elegies in the folklore of the Lor people] (Unpublished master’s thesis) University of Tehran, Tehran, Iran. [In Persian]
Nikabadi, A., & Bagheri, Z. (2013). A‘yin-haye sougvari va marsiyeh-khani dar Shahnameh-ye Ferdowsi [Mourning rituals and elegy recitation in Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh]. Studies in Lyric Language and Literature, 3(7), 59–76. [In Persian]
Nikoo, M. (2002). Shenakht-e mokhatab-e televiziyun ba rouykard-e estefadeh va rezamandi [Understanding television audiences using the uses and gratifications approach]. Tehran: Soroush. [In Persian]
Rabbani, R., & Rastegar, Y. (2008). Javan, sabk-e zendegi va farhang-e masrafi [Youth, lifestyle, and consumer culture]. Cultural Engineering, 5(23–24), 44–53. [In Persian]
Rafiee, M., & Rezaei, J. (2002). Birjandnāmeh: Birjand dar aghaz-e sadeh-ye chahardahom-e khorshidi [Birjandnameh: Birjand at the beginning of the 20th century]. Tehran: Hirmand. [In Persian]
Rahmani, T. (2015). Eqtesad-e kallan [Macroeconomics] (Vol. 2). Tehran: Nour-e Elm. [In Persian]
Razavizadeh, N. (2005). Barrasi-ye ta’sir-e resaneh-ha bar tamayol be taghyir-e sabk-e zendegi-ye roostayi [The impact of media on rural lifestyle change]. Social Sciences Quarterly, 12(31), 111–114. [In Persian]
Sarrajzadeh, S. H., Ferasatkhah, M., & Zamani Moghadam, M. (2016). Negaresh-e lahuti va nasuti nesbat be marg: Motale‘e-ye marg-andishi nemune-i az daneshjuyan ba ravesh-e nazariyeh-ye zamineh-i [Transcendent and immanent attitudes toward death: A grounded theory study of death contemplation among students]. Cultural and Communication Studies, 11(40), 151–176. [In Persian]
Severin, W. J., & Tankard, J. W. (2001). Communication theories: Origins, methods, and uses in the mass media (pp. 115-117). New York: Longman.
Sorlin, W. J., & Tankard, J. (2014). Nazariyeh-haye ertebatāt [Communication theories] (A. Dehghan, Trans.). Tehran: University of Tehran Press. [In Persian]
Strauss, A., & Corbin, J. (2016). Mabani-ye pajoohesh-e keyfi: fonun va marāhel-e tolid-e nazariye-ye zamineh-i [Basics of qualitative research: Techniques and procedures for developing grounded theory] (E. Afshar, Trans.). Tehran: Nashr-e Ney. [In Persian]
Sumiala, J. (2021). Raesaneh va a‘yin-e marg, jamā‘at va zendegi-ye rouzmarreh [Mediated death: Funerals, communalism, and everyday life] (N. Khajehzadeh, Trans.). Tehran: Nashr-e Sales. [In Persian]
Tabeei, M., Yousefi, A., & Sedigh Ourei, Gh. (2017). Padidarshenasi-ye tajrobi-ye vakonesh be marg; motale‘e-ye zanan-e shahr-e Mashhad [An empirical phenomenology of reaction to death: A study of women in Mashhad]. Strategic Culture Quarterly, 10(40), 71–94. [In Persian]
Yaghubi, A., Mirhejazi, S. Z., & Soufizadeh, Z. (2019). Senkh-shenasi-ye tasvir az marg va farayandha-ye royarouyi ba an; mored-e motale‘e: Shahrvandan-e Gilani [Typology of images of death and coping processes: A case study of citizens in Gilan]. Applied Sociology, 30(2), 101–116. [In Persian]
Zaleskiewicz, T., Gasiorowska, A., Kesebir, P., Luszczynska, A., & Pyszczynski, T. (2013). Money and the fear of death: The symbolic power of money as an existential anxiety buffer. Journal of Economic Psychology, 36, 55–67.
Zamanimoghadam, M., & Akbari, Y. (2015). Negāresh-e jame‘e-shenākhti be marg-e digari va manāsak-e dafn [A sociological view of another’s death and burial rituals]. In Proceedings of the National Conference on the Anthropology of Death and Life. Tehran: Research Institute of Cultural Heritage and Tourism. [In Persian]
Zare, B., & Falah, M. (2012). Barrasi-ye sabk-e zendegi-ye javānān dar shahr-e Tehran va ‘avāmel-e mo‘asser bar an [The lifestyle of youth in Tehran and its influencing factors]. Iranian Journal of Cultural Studies, 5(4), 75–105. [In Persian]
Zeraati, M., Haqqani Zamidani, M., & Khodadadi Sangdeh, J. (2016). Moghayeseh-ye afsordegi va ezterab-e marg dar salmandan-e moghim va gheyr-e moghim dar sarā-ye sālmandan [A comparison of depression and death anxiety among elderly residents and non-residents in nursing homes]. Iranian Nursing Journal, 29(102), 45–54. [In Persian]

  • Receive Date 14 April 2025
  • Revise Date 14 July 2025
  • Accept Date 02 August 2025