Culture, Consolation, and Continuing Bonds in Bereavement
portes grátis
Culture, Consolation, and Continuing Bonds in Bereavement
The Selected Works of Dennis Klass
Klass, Dennis
Taylor & Francis Ltd
01/2022
302
Dura
Inglês
9781032153049
15 a 20 dias
553
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction. 1. An Intellectual Life Review Section 1: Bereaved Parents and The Self-Help Process 2. Professional Roles in a Self-Help Group for the Bereaved 3. The Aftermath of Spiritual Storms 4. Continuing Bonds in the Psychic and Social Worlds of Bereaved Parents During the Resolution of Grief in a Self-Help Group 5. How Can an Outsider Understand? 6. Acceptance Speech - Compassionate Friends Appreciation Award Section 2: Expanding the Western Theory of Grief 7. What's the Problem with the Dominant Model of Grief? 8. The Sociology of Continuing Bonds 9. Neglected Areas in Bereavement Research: Sorrow and Solace 10. Grief, Consolation, and Religions: A Conceptual Framework Section 3: Cross-Cultural Study of Grief 11. Ancestor Worship in Japan: Dependence and the Resolution of Grief 12. The Buddha and the Christ: How Religious Relics, Doctrines, and Rituals Continue the Bonds Between Founders and Their Disciples Section 4: Theory and Meaning 13. Elisabeth Kuebler-Ross and the Tradition of the Private Sphere: An Analysis of Symbols 14. John Bowlby's Model of Grief and the Problem of Identification Section 5: Case Study of a Bereaved Parent 15. Charles Darwin's Sorrow: Parental Bereavement in His Worldview and His Theory of Natural Selection
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Bereaved Parents;Continuing bonds;Bereavement Research;complicated grief;Bereaved People;death;Mental Health Movement;dying;Self-help Process;grief;Lost Object;models of grief;Child's Presence;cross-cultural study;Ancestor Rituals;sociology of grief;Existential Philosopher;qualitative research;Bereavement Studies;ethnography;Inter-subjective Space;comparative religions;Counter Transference;psychology of religion;Continuing Bonds Model;TCF;Tibetan Buddhism;Child's Death;Face To Face;Annie's Death;Human Suffering;Nursing Care Plan;Bereaved Children;Dead Person;Compassionate Friends;Buddha Altar;Bowlby Model
Introduction. 1. An Intellectual Life Review Section 1: Bereaved Parents and The Self-Help Process 2. Professional Roles in a Self-Help Group for the Bereaved 3. The Aftermath of Spiritual Storms 4. Continuing Bonds in the Psychic and Social Worlds of Bereaved Parents During the Resolution of Grief in a Self-Help Group 5. How Can an Outsider Understand? 6. Acceptance Speech - Compassionate Friends Appreciation Award Section 2: Expanding the Western Theory of Grief 7. What's the Problem with the Dominant Model of Grief? 8. The Sociology of Continuing Bonds 9. Neglected Areas in Bereavement Research: Sorrow and Solace 10. Grief, Consolation, and Religions: A Conceptual Framework Section 3: Cross-Cultural Study of Grief 11. Ancestor Worship in Japan: Dependence and the Resolution of Grief 12. The Buddha and the Christ: How Religious Relics, Doctrines, and Rituals Continue the Bonds Between Founders and Their Disciples Section 4: Theory and Meaning 13. Elisabeth Kuebler-Ross and the Tradition of the Private Sphere: An Analysis of Symbols 14. John Bowlby's Model of Grief and the Problem of Identification Section 5: Case Study of a Bereaved Parent 15. Charles Darwin's Sorrow: Parental Bereavement in His Worldview and His Theory of Natural Selection
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Bereaved Parents;Continuing bonds;Bereavement Research;complicated grief;Bereaved People;death;Mental Health Movement;dying;Self-help Process;grief;Lost Object;models of grief;Child's Presence;cross-cultural study;Ancestor Rituals;sociology of grief;Existential Philosopher;qualitative research;Bereavement Studies;ethnography;Inter-subjective Space;comparative religions;Counter Transference;psychology of religion;Continuing Bonds Model;TCF;Tibetan Buddhism;Child's Death;Face To Face;Annie's Death;Human Suffering;Nursing Care Plan;Bereaved Children;Dead Person;Compassionate Friends;Buddha Altar;Bowlby Model