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Berlin, Gail Ivy – College English, 2012
The encounter with literature of the Holocaust, saturated as it is with unfathomable grief, loss, terror, and death, presents its readers with difficulties rare in literatures not dealing with the extreme. Specifically, usual academic discourse lacks a register for addressing the intense emotions that Holocaust narratives or poetry may generate.…
Descriptors: World History, Altruism, Empathy, Poetry
Sagberg, Sturla; Roen, Ingebrigt – International Journal of Children's Spirituality, 2011
This article presents cases from informal situations of grief and a project called "I and death". These cases suggest that different worldviews affect the process of grief, and that children often do not get the support they need in terms of spiritual care. This affects attitudes towards grief in adulthood. Social practices of encountering death…
Descriptors: Grief, World Views, Religious Factors, Death
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
Tillmann, Lisa M. – Journal of Applied Communication Research, 2009
In 1996, the author published "A Secret Life in a Culture of Thinness: Reflections on Body, Food, and Bulimia" (Tillmann-Healy, 1996), an account of her struggle with binging and purging from ages 15 to 25. She came to understand bulimia as a communicative act, expressing fear, anxiety, and grief. From 25 to 35, her recovery from bulimia involved…
Descriptors: Eating Disorders, Human Body, Self Concept, Emotional Response
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
Mayes, Rachel; Llewellyn, Gwynnyth – Journal of Intellectual & Developmental Disability, 2009
It is unlikely that every parent with intellectual disability comes under the scrutiny of the care and protection system. That many do is evident in the figures from a number of countries that report between 30 and 40% of the children of parents with intellectual disability are removed from their parents' care and placed in protective custody, in…
Descriptors: Placement, Child Neglect, Mental Retardation, Parents with Disabilities

Brabant, Sarah – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1990
Draws on work of George Herbert Mead to question premise that acute grief that continues or reoccurs two or more years following loss of loved one is pathological. Suggests that onset of intense pain years after loss may be response to "new" death or loss. (Author/NB)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Death, Emotional Response, Grief

Kauffman, Jeffrey – Omega: Journal of Death and Dying, 1994
Sees dissociative functions in mourning process as occurring in conjunction with integrative trends. Considers initial shock reaction in mourning as model of normal dissociation in mourning process. Dissociation is understood to be related to traumatic significance of death in human consciousness. Discerns four psychological categories of…
Descriptors: Death, Emotional Adjustment, Emotional Response, Grief
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
Curtin, Daniel F.; Byrd, Gwen; Rocchio, Dominica – Catholic Education: A Journal of Inquiry and Practice, 2006
In an effort to encourage dialogue and reflection on matters of common concern and interest, this journal invites responses on selected articles from other educators, who engage the text critically and offer some reflections about its utility and validity. This paper presents responses from Daniel F. Curtin, Gwen Byrd and Dominica Rocchio to the…
Descriptors: Altruism, Grief, School Closing, Catholic Schools
Smith, William D. – American School Board Journal, 1984
A neighborhood's reaction to the announcement of a school closing involves the five progressive stages Elisabeth Kubler-Ross describes as inevitable for one's reaction to the death of a friend or relative. (DCS)
Descriptors: Community Attitudes, Death, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Response
Black, Susan – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2005
Many kids in school will come face-to-face with the death of a close relative or friend. As such, schools need to reach out to grieving students. While it is certainly true that schools cannot compensate for children's severe losses, and it is also true that teachers and counselors cannot assuage children's grief alone, it is also the case that…
Descriptors: Grief, Emotional Response, Student Needs, Psychological Needs
Worden, J. William – 1996
The research findings on childhood grief are often inconsistent and differ among studies. This book presents major findings from the Child Bereavement Study and looks at the implications of these of these findings for intervention with bereaved children and their families. Following an introduction describing the methodology of the Child…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Bereavement, Childhood Attitudes, Childhood Needs
O'Connor, Nancy – 1984
This book deals with death and the grieving process. The first three chapters cover several universal aspects of grieving. Four stages of grief are described and various feelings of grief (denial, anger, guilt, depression, acceptance) are examined. The next five chapters detail specific losses: death of a spouse, parent, child, friends and…
Descriptors: Bereavement, Coping, Death, Emotional Response
Werth, James L., Jr. – Death Studies, 2005
The author, a psychologist who has been specializing in end-of-life issues for over a decade, uses the death of his fiancee (Becky), following the withdrawal of a ventilator and the refusal to place her back on the machine, to discuss research and analysis of end-of-life care in the United States. After briefly discussing his own background,…
Descriptors: Grief, Death, Self Determination, Decision Making
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