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Jonna Kallaste Håkansson – Ethics and Education, 2025
This paper explores what happens when animal slaughter is addressed in upper secondary school from a position of open solidarity with the animals themselves, i.e. "an animal standpoint." Drawing upon ethnographic fieldwork from a collaborative project with teachers, students, activists, and scholars, the paper explores what happens when…
Descriptors: Animal Husbandry, Animals, Death, Foreign Countries
Helena Pedersen – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
In line with Andrew Culp's work "Dark Deleuze" (2016) and in opposition to the tendency in some education studies communities to selectively engage affirmative and vitalist dimensions of Deleuze's work, this article engages the radical critical theory foundation of "Anti-Oedipus" (1972/2009) by exploring anatomies of desire at…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Educational Philosophy, Critical Theory, Ethnography
Roberts, Peter – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2021
What might it mean to engage in an educative struggle with death? Leo Tolstoy's "The Death of Ivan Ilyich" helps us to answer that question. Tolstoy's story depicts the life of a man who, when suddenly faced with the prospect of his own death, is at first unable to comprehend the reality of his situation. He is angry, fearful, and…
Descriptors: Death, Russian Literature, Psychological Patterns, Experience
Snauwaert, Maïté – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
A number of literary grief memoirs can be read as lessons in living with loss. While their authors resist resilience, they endeavour a very modest programme: that of finding ways to get through the day. Their biggest challenge is loneliness, yet they come to relish solitude, which hosts the conversation they maintain with the deceased, as well as…
Descriptors: Grief, Resilience (Psychology), Psychological Patterns, Coping
Jones, Kerry; Murphy, Samantha – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2021
This paper addresses the role of 'emotional labour' in conducting sensitive research. As such it begins to unpick the emotional and embodied consequences of working with data which covers sensitive subjects, in this case perinatal death, and considers how such responses are likely to impact on the analysis of data. We draw upon two doctoral…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Research, Grief, Parents
Jakoubek, Marek – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2019
This paper analyses the phenomenon of the death of informants. Based on his own experience with the long-term (1999-2016) research of Voyvodovo -- the only Czech village in Bulgaria, the author shows what the death of one's informants means for the research and the researcher. The author argues that any long-term fieldwork entails emotional…
Descriptors: Death, Field Studies, Interpersonal Relationship, Foreign Countries
Malinen, Antti; Laine-Frigren, Tuomas; Kaarninen, Mervi – History of Education, 2022
During the Second World War, Nordic countries witnessed a large-scale displacement of the population as around 70,000 Finnish children were evacuated to other Nordic countries. While up to 15,000 of them did not return to Finland, the majority travelled back, carrying multiple ruptures in their close relationships: first from their biological…
Descriptors: War, Novels, Childrens Literature, Parents
Lake, James – International Journal for Transformative Research, 2022
Mental health professionals can help patients understand exceptional and paranormal experiences, integrate them into day-to-day life, and cope with confusion and anxiety that sometimes accompany them. However, a broader clinical perspective and specialized training in clinical parapsychology is needed. In the first part of the paper I argue that…
Descriptors: Mental Health, Health Personnel, Mental Health Workers, Patients
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
Hållander, Marie – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2019
This article discusses the relation between emotions and testimony, by asking the questions: What do emotions do? Are emotions possible and desirable starting points for teaching difficult and complex subjects such as injustice and historical wounds? This article explores the 2015 image and testimony of Alan Kurdi, lying on a beach of the…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Criticism, Political Attitudes, Cultural Influences
Den Elzen, Katrin – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2019
This paper examines how people find happiness and create wellbeing when confronted by extreme adversity. Utilising the Dialogical Self Theory for an analysis of published autobiographies, it investigates two case studies, Nick Vujicic, who was born without limbs, and Austrian author Barbara Pachl-Eberhart, who narrates creating a fulfilled life…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Well Being, Psychological Patterns, Trauma
Petitfils, Brad – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2016
In today's society, where the Promethean project of mastering the universe seems to guide the scientific community to its last moment of triumph--human immortality--young people seem to lack curricular opportunities to engage with mortality. This is not surprising, as the legacy of psychology, as far back as the times of Freud and Jung, exposes a…
Descriptors: Death, Popular Culture, Teaching Methods, Coping
Protivnak, Jake J.; Scott, Holly; Herman, Emily R.; Matos, Danielle – Journal of School Counseling, 2020
Unrecognized grief (also called disenfranchised grief) is an emotion experienced when a loss is not socially supported, mourned, or acknowledged (Doka, 1989). Elementary students often experience unrecognized grief when relationships with friends, family, teachers, support professionals, and pets change or end. While these developments are often a…
Descriptors: Grief, Emotional Experience, Elementary School Students, Children
Gibbons, Andrew – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2013
This article explores the story of "the other Mersault" whose narrative is published in the posthumous and arguably incomplete work "A happy death." That this work is incomplete and that it appears (particularly through a reading of Camus' notebooks) to be a precursor to The outsider, has arguably limited scholarly…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Psychological Patterns, Literature, Childhood Attitudes
Farley, Lisa – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2014
This paper examines debates about the meaning and value of depression in relationship to efforts to teach about, and learn from, historical loss. It is argued that depression is not solely an individual illness or biological aberration, but a trace and effect of facing the many and profound losses--of culture, language and life--that constitute…
Descriptors: Depression (Psychology), History Instruction, Social Attitudes, Parent Child Relationship

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