Dying and Death: Inter-disciplinary PerspectivesAsa Kasher Rodopi, 2007 - 217 pages Death is a topic people are reluctant to ponder. Neither is dying a process that is usually being openly discussed. However, on a variety of occasions, dying and death are on a person's minds, under some sensitive circumstances, he or she are eager to discuss with a close person, a friend, a professional. The present volume, the second in the Series on Dying and Death, is meant to enrich personal experience of dying or death by providing its reader with knowledge and understanding of some aspects of dying or death. Section 1 describes practices of mourning, in different times and places: USA during the Civil War (Ashley Byock), the Island of Viz, between Croatia and Italy (Kathleen Young), present day Israel (Asa Kasher), medieval Serbia (Mira Crouch) and post-Holocaust USA (Paula David). Section 2 consists of reflections on mourning. It includes philosophical discussions of Friendship (Gary Peters), Grace (Dana Freibach-Heifetz), and the Other (Havi Carel), all in the context of mourning, as well as Mourning itself as a skill (Marguerite Peggy Flynn). Section 3 brings papers on culture and suicide, in early modern Holland (Laura Cruz), in historical Japan (Lawrence Fouraker), as well as in the Jazz age (Kathleen Jones). Section 4 discusses different predicaments of medics facing death and dying: terminal diagnosis (Angela Armstrong-Coster), palliative patients (Anna Taube), and the hospice setting (Elizabeth Gill). |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 43
Page 1
... relationship to the Union's articulation of and consolidation around a distinct socio - political cause . This case presents an excellent occasion for exploring the relationship between mourning in the public sphere and the collective ...
... relationship to the Union's articulation of and consolidation around a distinct socio - political cause . This case presents an excellent occasion for exploring the relationship between mourning in the public sphere and the collective ...
Page 3
... relationship between the Union cause and the deaths that this righteous purpose entailed. Ellsworth's case is especially unique because it inaugurated the wartime practice of embalming the dead. While this technique was touted as a ...
... relationship between the Union cause and the deaths that this righteous purpose entailed. Ellsworth's case is especially unique because it inaugurated the wartime practice of embalming the dead. While this technique was touted as a ...
Page 6
... relations also structures such sentimental novels as Susan Warner's The Wide, Wide World, in which Ellen's mother ... relationship between the treatment of the dead and the culture of the living was the subject of Harper's Weekly ...
... relations also structures such sentimental novels as Susan Warner's The Wide, Wide World, in which Ellen's mother ... relationship between the treatment of the dead and the culture of the living was the subject of Harper's Weekly ...
Page 11
... relationship to a greater cause. This process itself helped construct and solidify this cause. Although it is impossible to determine how Ellsworth came to be embalmed, it is certain that his known relationship to the President provided ...
... relationship to a greater cause. This process itself helped construct and solidify this cause. Although it is impossible to determine how Ellsworth came to be embalmed, it is certain that his known relationship to the President provided ...
Page 13
... relationship that pervaded wartime sensibilities of the relationship between this nation and the deaths of its citizen-soldiers. Lincoln formulates a distinct relationship between the continuity of a nation “conceived in liberty” and ...
... relationship that pervaded wartime sensibilities of the relationship between this nation and the deaths of its citizen-soldiers. Lincoln formulates a distinct relationship between the continuity of a nation “conceived in liberty” and ...
Contents
1 | |
17 | |
27 | |
Extreme Makeovers and Reciprocal Relations | 57 |
Some Themes | 71 |
The Ambivalence | 81 |
Logistics and Mystery | 107 |
Gender Youth | 135 |
Kathleen Jones | 153 |
Medics Facing Terminal Diagnosis? | 173 |
Reflections on the Needs of Palliative Patients | 203 |
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Common terms and phrases
action adult children ambivalence Arishima Takeo Asa Kasher attitudes battle of Kosovo body caregivers century children of survivors concept context creative Croatia culture dead death and dying deceased depressive position Derrida discussion doctors Durkheim dying and death dying individual Early Modern Ellsworth embalming Emile Durkheim Emmanuel Levinas emotional experience expression face Gender girls History Holocaust hospice Ibid identity illness Japanese Karuizawa Kierkegaard Komizans Kosovo Leiden London loss Louise meaning Medicine melancholia melancholic moral mother mourners national mourning nurse object one’s organization organizational Oxford pain palliative Palliative Care parents patients person philosophical physicians poems professional Reflections relation relationship respondents rituals role samurai secular grace secular-humanistic grace sense sentimental seppuku Serbian Serbs social structure suicidal behaviour suicide rates suicide stories survivor families traditional transience University Press Ustasha volunteer Vukashin woman World War II York young women
Popular passages
Page 172 - If thou wilt diligently hearken to the voice of the LORD thy God, and wilt do that which is right in his sight, and wilt give ear to his commandments, and keep all his statutes, I will put none of these diseases upon thee, which I have brought upon the Egyptians : for I am the LORD that healeth thee.
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Page 8 - And, finally, in 1787 one of the declared objects for ordaining and establishing the Constitution was "to form a more perfect Union.
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