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Taubman, Peter – Educational Theory, 2017
In this response essay, Peter Taubman considers the relationship between melancholia and Freud's notion of a death drive. Taubman explores how audit culture sustains melancholia and intensifies the death drive, ultimately deadening our psyches by erasing memory, disparaging feelings, shutting down thought, and ignoring history. Taubman concludes…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Death, Memory, Psychological Patterns
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Conroy, James C. – Journal of Moral Education, 2009
For something approaching 50 years, multicultural education has been accepted as an educational, social and moral good by liberal educators. Its instantiation in the practices of education has, in various ways, largely depended on a series of strategies for making the other (the stranger) familiar within the majority culture. This essay suggests…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Cultural Pluralism, Psychological Patterns, Epistemology
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Parker, Blaise Astra – Feminist Teacher: A Journal of the Practices, Theories, and Scholarship of Feminist Teaching, 2009
The author's partner Jay died on May 23, 2006. It was sudden and unexpected--he was 31, the author was 30. Her grief was prolonged and agonizing, and she has since learned that doctors refer to her condition as "complicated grief." Truly, she is not sure how she survived the first year after Jay's death. She certainly was not convinced she wanted…
Descriptors: Feminism, Grief, Coping, Well Being
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Balk, David E. – Death Studies, 2008
The author argues that the term "recovery" aptly describes the trajectory following the bereavement of most persons. While the term "resilience" has gained ascendancy in the thanatology literature and the term "recovery" has been dismissed as inappropriate to denote responses over time to being bereaved, the irony is that all dictionaries of the…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Definitions, Coping
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Jankofsky, Klaus P.; Stuecher, Uwe H. – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1984
Identifies and discusses altruism as a basic trait of human character and behavior and explores its possible implications for the dying person. Observable in hospitals and literary-aesthetic representations, altruism is a part of the infinite variety of humanity's perceptions, activities, and experiences that make up the mosaic of life and death.…
Descriptors: Altruism, Death, Medieval Literature, Psychological Patterns
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Leenaars, Antoon A. – Death Studies, 2006
People who have committed a certain sin ought to be dead; I am a person who has committed that sin; therefore, I ought to be dead. Thus is the logic of a suicidal mind. Lester, Szaz, and others argue the "sinner" should always be allowed to kill him/herself. Shneidman, Leenaars and others do not agree. Once one knows the suicidal mind, it is easy…
Descriptors: Suicide, Death, Logical Thinking, Philosophy
Wrenn, C. Gilbert – Humanist Educator, 1979
The author examines the loneliness of dying for the person facing death and for his or her loved ones. He also discusses the agony of grieving, be it for the death of a loved one, the loss of a marriage, or even the termination of a life-fulfilling position. (Author)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Death, Emotional Response, Grief
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Pommereau, Xavier; And Others – Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 1987
Considers explanations for women's use of less violent methods to commit suicide. Reinterprets "Snow White" and makes parallel with contemporary clinical cases to show that illusion of a nondefinitive death is often assimilated, in western culture, with step toward rebirth. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Death, Drug Abuse
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Matt, Denise A.; And Others – Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 1988
Asserts that, in some situations, one of the most useful strategies for helping cancer patients to cope can be denial. Presents definitions of coping in general and denial in particular. Discusses potential positive functions of denial for cancer patients and provides an overview of potential negative consequences. Concludes with brief summary and…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Cancer, Coping, Counseling Techniques
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Evans, Beth J. – Journal of School Health, 1982
A teacher describes the death of a fourth grade student and its impact on the child's classmates. The children's expressions of grief were channeled into various discussions and activities. (JN)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Counselor Teacher Cooperation, Death, Depression (Psychology)
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Wellhousen, Karyn; Downey, Jill – Dimensions of Early Childhood, 1992
Discusses stages of the grieving process and ways in which early childhood teachers and caregivers can help young children understand and cope with death. An annotated bibliography of children's books concerning death is provided. (BB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Annotated Bibliographies, Childrens Literature, Cognitive Ability