Definition of "afterlife"
afterlife
noun
plural afterlives or (rare, proscribed) afterlifes
The place believed to be inhabited by people who have died.
Quotations
There were human cultures that taught an afterlife of the blessed on mountaintops or in clouds, in caverns or oases, but she could not recall any in which if you were very, very good when you died you went to the beach.
1985, Carl Sagan, chapter 20, in Contact, New York: Simon and Schuster, page 361
He wanted to offer a little reminder that the world is cruel and pointless, all human endeavour ultimately meaningless, and no advancement in this world worth making besides gaining God’s favour and an entry ticket into the better half of the afterlife.
2000, Zadie Smith, White Teeth, London: Hamish Hamilton, page 434
(countable, uncountable) The part of a person's life that follows a particular stage or event; later life.
Quotations
Those Favorites as it is their first care, to hold up themselves in that height of grace, so alwayes make it their second endeavour to raise Estates, to get Offices and governments, that if they doe remove from that height of favour, yet they may still retaine some happy monument of their former power, and a stay to their after-life.
1631, John Barclay, chapter 13, in The Mirrour of Mindes, London: Thomas Walkley, page 120
In early youth, not only love, but friendship, at first sight, grows out of an ill-directed sensibility; and in after-life, women under the powerful influence of this temper […] are too readily inclined to select for their confidential connections, flexible and flattering companions […]
1799, Hannah More, chapter 15, in Strictures on the Modern System of Female Education, volume 2, London: T. Cadell Jun. and W. Davies, page 103
These trembling children have at least this consolation—that never, in their after lives, no, not when poison-gas blinds and chokes them, not when their wives betray them, not when men scorn them and spit upon them, will they know again such terror, despair and loneliness as in the happy carefree schooldays of their youth.
1937, Hugh Walpole, John Cornelius: His Life and Adventures, London: Macmillan, Part 2, Chapter 1
Mary’s body was a battleground from the beginning. Who was she before the angel called? Why was she chosen, why not some other good girl? Did she suffer pain in childbirth? What was her afterlife? Did she have more children?
2009, Hilary Mantel, “Marian Devotion”, in Mantel Pieces, London: 4th Estate, published 2020
The effects of a person's actions, or their reputation, after death.
Quotations
[…] poor poverty and birth, can be no hindrance to natural wit, for natural wit, in a poor Cottage, may spin an after-life, enter-weaving several colour’d fancies, and threeds of opinions, making fine and curious Tapestries to hang in the Chambers of fame,
1662, Margaret Cavendish, The Several Wits, Scene 34, in Playes, London: John Martyn et al., p. 111
Let every Man who votes consider, That he is now going to give away that, for which the Soldier gave up his Rest, his Pleasure, and his Life; the Scholar resign’d his whole Series of Thought, his Midnight Repose, and his Morning Slumbers. In a Word, he is (as I may say) to be Judge of that After-Life, which noble Spirits prefer to their very real Beings.
1709, Richard Steele, “The Lucubrations of Isaac Bickerstaff Esq.”, in The Tatler, number 74, London, published 1712, page 162
The events or situations that result from a particular event; the later reception, consumption or reworking of a cultural production such as a film, book, etc.
Quotations
The history of the great works of art tells us about their antecedents, their realization in the age of the artist, their potentially eternal afterlife in succeeding generations.
1969, Harry Zohn (translator), “The Task of the Translator” in Illuminations by Walter Benjamin, New York: Schocken Books, p. 71