Literature DB >> 24738824

A social constructionist account of grief: loss and the narration of meaning.

Robert A Neimeyer1, Dennis Klass, Michael Robert Dennis.   

Abstract

In contrast to dominant Western conceptions of bereavement in largely intrapsychic terms, the authors argue that grief or mourning is not primarily an interior process, but rather one that is intricately social, as the bereaved commonly seek meaning in this unsought transition in not only personal and familial, but also broader community and even cultural spheres. The authors therefore advocate a social constructionist model of grieving in which the narrative processes by which meanings are found, appropriated, or assembled occur at least as fully between people as within them. In this view, mourning is a situated interpretive and communicative activity charged with establishing the meaning of the deceased's life and death, as well as the postdeath status of the bereaved within the broader community concerned with the loss. They describe this multilevel phenomenon drawing first on psychological research on individual self-narratives that organize life experience into plot structures that display some level of consistency over time, whose viability is then negotiated in the intimate interpersonal domain of family and close associates. Second, they explore public communication, including eulogies, grief accounts in popular literature, and elegies. All of these discourses construct the identity of the deceased as he or she was, and as she or he is now in the individual and communal continuing bonds with the deceased. Finally, they consider different cultural contexts to see how expressions of grief are policed to ensure their coherence with the prevailing social and political order. That is, the meanings people find through the situated interpretive and communicative activity that is grieving must either be congruent with the meanings that undergird the larger context or represent an active form of resistance against them.

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Year:  2014        PMID: 24738824     DOI: 10.1080/07481187.2014.913454

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Death Stud        ISSN: 0748-1187


  22 in total

1.  Unfinished Business in Bereavement.

Authors:  Kara L Klingspon; Jason M Holland; Robert A Neimeyer; Wendy G Lichtenthal
Journal:  Death Stud       Date:  2015

2.  Shifting and intersecting needs: Parents' experiences during and following the withdrawal of life sustaining treatments in the paediatric intensive care unit.

Authors:  Elizabeth G Broden; Allison Werner-Lin; Martha A Q Curley; Pamela S Hinds
Journal:  Intensive Crit Care Nurs       Date:  2022-02-24       Impact factor: 4.235

3.  Narrative reconstruction therapy for prolonged grief disorder-rationale and case study.

Authors:  Tuvia Peri; Ilanit Hasson-Ohayon; Sharon Garber; Rivka Tuval-Mashiach; Paul A Boelen
Journal:  Eur J Psychotraumatol       Date:  2016-05-04

4.  Attitudes to suicide following the suicide of a friend or relative: a qualitative study of the views of 429 young bereaved adults in the UK.

Authors:  Alexandra Pitman; Hedvig Nesse; Nicola Morant; Valeriya Azorina; Fiona Stevenson; Michael King; David Osborn
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2017-12-13       Impact factor: 3.630

Review 5.  In-hospital experiences of families of potential organ donors: A systematic review and qualitative synthesis.

Authors:  Sean Glenton Dicks; Kristen Ranse; Frank Mp van Haren; Douglas P Boer
Journal:  Health Psychol Open       Date:  2017-05-22

6.  What are the physical and psychological health effects of suicide bereavement on family members? Protocol for an observational and interview mixed-methods study in Ireland.

Authors:  Ailbhe Spillane; Celine Larkin; Paul Corcoran; Karen Matvienko-Sikar; Ella Arensman
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2017-03-30       Impact factor: 2.692

7.  Research-Based Theater and "Stigmatized Trauma": The Case of Suicide Bereavement.

Authors:  Anneli Silvén Hagström
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2020-06-16

Review 8.  A novel approach to studying co-evolution of understanding and research: Family bereavement and the potential for organ donation as a case study.

Authors:  Sean G Dicks; Kristen Ranse; Holly Northam; Frank Mp van Haren; Douglas P Boer
Journal:  Health Psychol Open       Date:  2018-01-24

Review 9.  The development of a narrative describing the bereavement of families of potential organ donors: A systematic review.

Authors:  Sean Glenton Dicks; Kristen Ranse; Holly Northam; Douglas P Boer; Frank Mp van Haren
Journal:  Health Psychol Open       Date:  2017-12-05

Review 10.  An exploration of the relationship between families of deceased organ donors and transplant recipients: A systematic review and qualitative synthesis.

Authors:  Sean Glenton Dicks; Holly Northam; Frank Mp van Haren; Douglas P Boer
Journal:  Health Psychol Open       Date:  2018-06-25
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