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Doug Risner; Chris Marlow – Research in Dance Education, 2024
Using an autoethnographic approach, this article focuses on the experiences of two male dance educators/researchers living with/through terminal cancer. Autoethnographers analyze their 'unique life experiences in the context of the social and cultural institutions that have shaped the world the researcher inhabits.' Drawn from a larger research…
Descriptors: Cancer, Dance, Males, Ethnography
Ridgway, Alexandra – Higher Education Research and Development, 2023
The death of a parent can strike at our very core, rattling our sense of self and raising questions of how we could possibly continue beyond their departure. For the PhD student, parental loss can act as a significant disruption, saddling them with a heavy emotional toll to carry alongside the typical challenges of completing a thesis. Yet,…
Descriptors: Grief, Doctoral Students, Doctoral Programs, Death
Mathew, Linita Eapen – British Journal of Guidance & Counselling, 2021
Despite the decline of rituals in North America, contemporary grief literature emphasises the healing potential of these practices. After my father's death, and due to my cultural hybridity as an Indo-Canadian, once the short-term western ways of mourning concluded, long-term Indian rituals offered meaningful and sustaining ways to honour my…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Asian Culture, Ethnography, Interdisciplinary Approach
Bornstein, Lilach Naishtat; Naveh, Eyal – Journal of International Social Studies, 2018
How can we bridge the emotional and cognitive study of Holocaust testimonies in Israel? Can empathy be used as a stepping stone to critical reflection? And how can teachers address the manipulative popular interpretation of these testimonies in Israel, which seemingly place them beyond critical reflection? We examine these questions through an…
Descriptors: Empathy, Teaching Methods, European History, Jews
Lai, Wing-Fu – Qualitative Report, 2012
Bereavement has been extensively studied over the years, yet scholarly work depicting, with the first-person perspective, the experience of childhood bereavement is severely lacking. The research question I set out to answer here is: What is it like as an Asian child to experience bereavement following grandparental death? As such,…
Descriptors: Grief, Diaries, Death, Grandparents
Furman, Rich – Journal of Family Social Work, 2005
This study explores the meaning of the death of a companion animal through autoethnographic poetry in conjunction with narrative reflections. This method expands the depth and scope of poetry in qualitative research by transforming expressive works into both the subject and product of inquiry.
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Poetry, Animals, Death