Literature DB >> 7671117

Narratives of elder parental death: a structural and cultural analysis.

R L Rubinstein1.   

Abstract

This article reports on middle-aged daughters' perceptions of the experience of parental death. One hundred three married women, aged 40-62, were interviewed about six months after the deaths of their widowed elderly mothers using an in-depth qualitative interview format. As part of the interview, informants were asked to "tell the story of your mother's death," a question designed to elicit a subjectively based narrative account. Analysis of these narrative texts discovered a number of salient themes: the quality of medical care; the personality of the mother; issues of health decision making; the salience of the death scene; and mother-daughter closeness at death. Issues of family dynamics were quite important and permeated each description. In general, the narratives disclosed four aspects of the elder parental death experience: the enmeshment of medical care with the story of the death; the occurrence of pervasive ageism in accounts of the death; impossible dilemmas in terminal care of the aged; and the irreducibility of subjectivity in the daughter's biography of her mother.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7671117     DOI: 10.1525/maq.1995.9.2.02a00080

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  3 in total

1.  Health, welfare reform, and narratives of uncertainty among Cambodian refugees.

Authors:  G Becker; Y Beyene; P Ken
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2000-06

2.  Contesting death, speaking of dying.

Authors:  Judy Z Segal
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2000

3.  End of life: a family narrative.

Authors:  Helen K Black; Miriam S Moss; Robert L Rubinstein; Sidney Z Moss
Journal:  J Aging Res       Date:  2011-05-14
  3 in total

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