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Jakoby, Nina R. – Death Studies, 2012
The article explores a sociological perspective on grief as a social emotion. Focusing on the social bond with the deceased, the self-concept of the survivor or the power of feeling rules, general sociological theories of emotions (symbolic interactionism, structural theory, behavioral theory) have the potential to deepen the understanding of…
Descriptors: Grief, Sociology, Social Influences, Emotional Response
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Begovac, Branka; Begovac, Ivan – Death Studies, 2012
This article presents, in the form of a clinical illustration, a therapeutic group of bereaved mothers with special reference to their dreams about their deceased children. The article presents descriptions of the emotions of these mothers and countertransference feelings, a topic that, to our knowledge, has not been frequently studied. The group…
Descriptors: Helplessness, Mothers, Psychotherapy, Group Therapy
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Moore, Rebecca – Death Studies, 2011
This article considers the stigmatized deaths in Jonestown, Guyana, in 1978, in which more than 900 Americans died of mass murder and suicide, and how this led to the disenfranchisement of grief. It examines the rituals of exclusion by which bodies were handled and describes the experiences of Jonestown survivors. It then looks at the ways in…
Descriptors: Grief, Foreign Countries, Social Bias, Death
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Death Studies, 2011
Specialists in death, dying, and bereavement and their consequences for individuals, families, and communities have experience and research findings that are relevant to an understanding of the reactions of individuals faced by deadly violence. At such times, powerful emotions and ingrained patterns of thought and behavior can given rise to…
Descriptors: Grief, Violence, Prevention, Conflict
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Aguirre, Regina T. P.; Slater, Holli – Death Studies, 2010
The authors asserted the need for increased postvention efforts for suicide survivors, individuals left behind to grieve the loss of a loved one by suicide, because they have an increased risk for suicide. Indeed, Shneidman (1972) asserted that suicide postvention efforts serve the dual purpose of assisting survivors through the grief process and…
Descriptors: Grief, Prevention, Suicide, Program Development
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Thomson, Paula – Death Studies, 2010
In this article, it is hypothesized that disorganizing, disorienting, and unresolved states of mind about loss experiences, as classified by the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI) coding system, may offer insight into the bereaved mind and may guide clinical treatment approaches. This article discusses pre-loss attachment organizations and the…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Attachment Behavior, Adults
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Wada, Kaori; Park, Jeeseon – Death Studies, 2009
The field of grief counseling has yet to see an integration of Buddhist psychology. Drawing on Buddhist psychology literature and Western models of grief, this article explores possible integrations of two approaches. To lay the foundation for this discussion, the authors introduced a brief overview of the history of Buddhism as well as a Buddhist…
Descriptors: Grief, Buddhism, Psychology, Religious Cultural Groups
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Walter, Tony – Death Studies, 2009
The division of labor, together with modern transport systems and certain cultural practices, enables the separation of home and work. This creates a setting for mourning very different from pre-urban societies. Three bereavement theories (reminder theory, dual process oscillation theory, and the importance of groups in the construction of…
Descriptors: Grief, Cultural Influences, Coping, Family Work Relationship
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Charles-Edwards, David – Death Studies, 2009
How people respond at work may have a critical part to play in how bereaved or terminally ill colleagues manage their grief and their lives. Although counselors, human resources, occupational health staff, and others may have an important back-up role to play, pivotal support needs to come from line managers, colleagues, and, where they exist,…
Descriptors: Grief, Occupational Safety and Health, Unions, Human Resources
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Kinder, Andrew; Cooper, Cary L. – Death Studies, 2009
The effect of any death spreads out to many people. Deaths that occur in the workplace need to be handled with particular care given that the bereaved family as well as work colleagues will have been affected. Death by suicide or situations when an employee becomes suicidal can challenge even the most experienced manager. This article aims to…
Descriptors: Suicide, Work Environment, Grief, Death
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Tedeschi, Richard G.; Calhoun, Lawrence G. – Death Studies, 2008
Responding to D. E. Balk (2004) about use of the term "recovery" to describe bereavement outcome, the authors take the view that this term is inadequate. Among the points raised are (a) the term recovery may imply a response to psychological disorder, whereas bereavement responses are generally normative; (b) recovery does not easily allow for…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Coping, Definitions
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Balk, David E. – Death Studies, 2004
Herman Feifel noted that appropriate attention to one's mourning and grieving allowed the dead to die and the bereaved "to redefine and reintegrate oneself into life" (H. Feifel, 1977, p. 9). The author takes this central focus on bereavement outcomes as the springboard for an examination of the concept recovery following bereavement. He examines…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Grief, Student Evaluation, Coping
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Shapiro, Ester R. – Death Studies, 2008
This article explores the concept of recovery in the wake of a loved one's death, using a cultural and developmental systems approach to understanding child, adult, and family bereavement outcomes as evolving, interdependent adaptive responses to changed circumstances of development within highly specific contexts in intergenerational time and…
Descriptors: Intervention, Ethics, Grief, Psychopathology
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Field, Nigel P.; Gao, Beryl; Paderna, Lisa – Death Studies, 2005
An attachment theory based perspective on the continuing bond to the deceased (CB) is proposed. The value of attachment theory in specifying the normative course of CB expression and in identifying adaptive versus maladaptive variants of CB expression based on their deviation from this normative course is outlined. The role of individual…
Descriptors: Grief, Attachment Behavior, Individual Differences, Religion
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Field, Nigel P. – Death Studies, 2006
Much of the contemporary bereavement literature on the continuing bond to the deceased (CB) has emphasized its adaptiveness and given limited attention to when it may be maladaptive. The attachment literature on disorganized-unresolved attachment classification in relation to loss, or "unresolved loss," is informative in identifying CB expressions…
Descriptors: Death, Attachment Behavior, Grief, Coping
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