Tanya D. Marsh

Death, et seq.

Society EN ↓ 49 episodes

Death, et seq. literally means "Death and what follows." This podcast addresses all aspects of death care in the United States -- options for funerals and disposition, the ways in which "traditions" are being disrupted, and where death care is headed. A broad range of experts within the funeral industry and various reform communities are invited to share their views. Listeners are invited to actively participate by submitting questions and topics of interest.

Author

Tanya D. Marsh

Category

Society

Podcast website

www.deathetseq.com

Latest episode

Jun 22, 2026

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Episodes

Episode 50: Human Remains and Medical Education with Emma Sherman 22.06.2026

Anatomical dissection is a fundamental part of medical education. In this episode, medical student Emma Sherman walks us through the use and treatment of donor bodies in medical education in the United States.

Episode 49: A Death Doula's Guide to a Meaningful End with Jane Callahan 09.06.2026
Episode 48: A Conversation with Sam Perry 26.05.2026

Sam Perry is an Associate Lecturer at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale, teaching in the Mortuary Science and Funeral Science program. He is also the President of the Green Burial Council International, 501(c)(3).

Episode 47: Are Catholic Relics Illegal? 11.05.2026

Alex Gracia, a third-year student at Wake Forest Law School, discusses the intersection between the Catholic practice of creating relics and keeping them in churches and the laws in the United States that forbid "abuse of corpse."

Episode 46: Demystifying End of Life Planning Documents 27.04.2026

Do you have your documents in order to allow for a trusted person to make decisions about your health care and property if you become incapacitated? This episode walks through four important kinds of documents and explains what each does: (1) power of attorney; (2) health care power of attorney; (3) advance directive or living will; and (4) funeral planning declaration. Whether you have an estate...

Episode 45: Empathy and End of Life with Stephanie Hopp 21.04.2026

In today's episode, I talk to Stephanie Hopp, EdD, RN, CPN, an Associate Professor in the Undergraduate Nursing Program at Clarkson College in Omaha, Nebraska. Professor Hopp talks about her experience as a nurse at Children's Nebraska Hospital and her scholarship on empathy in health care.

Episode 44: The Strange Case of Jeremy DeWitte 13.04.2026

In this episode of Death et seq., Professor Marsh talks to Wake Law student Spencer Maher about Jeremy DeWitte, the man who turned a Florida funeral escort service into a viral masterclass in policy impersonation. As the owner of Metro State Special Services, DeWitte patrolled Orlando streets on decommissioned police motorcycles, wearing a badge nearly identical to the LAPD's and carrying a pepper...

Episode 43: Regulating the Funeral Industry 06.04.2026

In this episode of the Death Esq. podcast, Professor Marsh welcomes Jay Doshi to discuss the outdated regulatory structures of the American funeral industry. Doshi explains how the industry stubbornly protects traditional, full-service embalmed funerals while consumer preference is rapidly shifting toward cremation and non-traditional burials. This disconnect is largely fueled by outdated single-l...

Episode 42: Green Burial with Suzanne Kelly 30.03.2026

On this episode, I talk to Suzanne Kelly, chair of the Town of Rhinebeck, New York Cemetery Committee about green burial. The Town of Rhinebeck Cemetery opened a Natural Burial Ground in 2014, only the second municipal natural burial ground in New York. Suzanne is also the author of the 2017 book "Greening Death – Reclaiming Burial Practices and Restoring our Tie to Earth." The research for this e...

Episode 41: Grave Goods 23.03.2026

“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 episod...

Episode 39: Evidentiary Body Parts 16.03.2026

In this episode, we discuss the retention and disposition of human remains after they are seized by law enforcement as part of a criminal investigation. We’re not talking about what happens to a body after an autopsy is conducted as part of an investigation. No, we’re talking about what happens to body parts (or things made from body parts) after they are seized as evidence of the crime itself. Fo...

Episode 38: Disposition of the Remains of Incarcerated Individuals 02.03.2026

When a person dies while incarcerated, what happens to their remains? Do incarcerated individuals receive as much respect in death as other individuals? Third-year Wake Forest Law student Katie Koesters explains the web of applicable state and federal laws and regulations.

Episode 37: Cremated Remains and What to Do With Them 23.02.2026

In this episode, third year Wake Forest Law student Connor Crotty compares the processes of cremation and alkaline hydrolysis (water cremation), discusses the chemical composition of cremated remains, and describes a number of memorialization options.

Episode 36: Early American Protestantism and Death 16.02.2026

Tanya talks to Erik Seeman, a history Professor at University at Buffalo and the author of several books on early American attitudes towards death and death care practices, including Speaking with the Dead in Early America. Dr. Seeman's work helps us understand the worldview of those who shaped American funeral and cemetery law, and he also has some insights on how those views have changed over th...

Episode 35: Catholicism and Death 09.02.2026

What death care practices are in line with the teachings of the Catholic Church? In this episode, Tanya talks to Wake Law student Andrea St. Paul about the historical evolution of Catholic death care practices.

Episode 34: The Ancient Law of Death 02.02.2026

In this episode, Tanya talks to Vivian Bolen about the law and death customs in Ancient Rome and Greece, and to Lillian Remler about death customs in Ancient Egypt. The echoes of this ancient law and these ancient practices can be felt in modern American law and social norms.

Episode 33: Burn, Bury or Biodegrade Me 26.01.2026

In this episode, Tanya talks to her friend Holly Swenson, walking her through the options for the disposition of her remains (cremation, casket burial, green burial, water cremation, and human composting). They also discuss who has the right to legally make disposition decisions and how to document your preferences. The bottom line is: people should be armed with information about their funeral an...

Episode 32: AI Memorialization and Digital Grief 19.01.2026

Since emerging tools like AI memorialization, grief bots, and digital afterlife platforms can essentially allow us to virtually resurrect the dead, they can provide support during times of intense grief, but they also raise a host of legal and ethical issues. This week I talk to second year Wake Lake student Manjot Kaur about these technologies and the thorny issues they raise.

Episode 31: Military Burials with Professor Ellie Morales 12.01.2026

In this episode, Tanya talks to Professor Ellie Morales, who directs the Veteran's Legal Clinic at Wake Forest Law School, about the funeral benefits available to service members and veterans, as well as the very important question of who qualifies as a "veteran" for the purpose of receiving benefits from the VA.

Episode 30: Cemetery GPR with Dr. David Leslie 05.01.2026

Ground penetrating radar (or GPR) is one of the geophysical techniques that archaeologists like Dr. David Leslie of Terrasearch Geophysical use to image or map archaeological sites without disturbing the ground itself. This is particularly useful to assess sites that are suspected of containing graves, or to better understand the boundaries or extent of known cemeteries. In this episode, Tanya tal...

Episode 29: Buying and Selling Human Remains 29.12.2025

For more information about the laws at issue in the so-called "Harvard Morgue Case," check out my article in The Conversation .

Episode 28: The Wake Forest Law Review & The Future of Death Care 22.12.2025

Will Boyce, the current Editor in Chief of The Wake Forest Law Review is the guest. He and Tanya discuss the legal scholarship created in connection with the Spring 2024 Symposium -- The Future of Death Care -- as well as explaining what law reviews are and how they work.

Episode 27: Cremation Fireworks 12.12.2025

Wake Law Student Jannine Huby organized this episode. She explains how cremation fireworks work and introduces Jason Diemer and Clay Adams of Greenlawn Funeral Home in Springfield, Missouri, the only U.S. funeral home that offers customized cremation fireworks memorials.

Episode 26: Barbara Kemmis on Consumer Preferences in Death Care 03.12.2025

In this episode, Tanya and Barbara Kemmis, the Executive Director of the Cremation Association of North America, discuss research conducted by Wake Forest University School of Law on consumer preferences in death care. The preliminary results of this research were recently published in The Cremationist magazine.

Episode 25: Multi-Jurisdictional Death with Bill Marsh 31.10.2025

In this episode, Professor Tanya Marsh discusses the legal complexities of multi-jurisdictional death with her father, Professor Bill Marsh. They explain that ensuring one's wishes are followed after death involves navigating three types of state laws: the default "right of sepulcher" (which grants control to next of kin), appointing a "designated agent" to supplant that default list, and using "p...

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