In this article, I explore aspects of grief and the surprising mirroring of hermeneutic research and the experience of grief. Neither grief or hermeneutic research are predictable, formulaic, or without surprises, and both require patience, humility, and an openness to what comes to greet us in the nature of aletheia.
Bearing witness to grief is about accepting and experiencing suffering as an unavoidable aspect of l...
In this editorial, I summon something of the intimate dangers of carefully studying and becoming fam...
The following small reflection was written around a year ago, but it has taken on new urgency for me...
In this article, I explore aspects of grief and the surprising mirroring of hermeneutic research and...
In this paper, the author responds to the Moules and Estefan (2018) Editorial “Watching My Mother Di...
Graduate winner: 2d place, 2020, 33nd Annual Carl Neureuther Student Book Collection Competitio
xxi, 182 leaves ; 29 cm.While a growing body of grief research focuses on how death affects the live...
In this paper, a professor and a group of doctoral students reflect on the video Out of Order: Deali...
In this article, the author performs a re-membering practice that incorporates a relational material...
To comprehend grief, we need knowledge about the range of diverse reactions incorporated within it. ...
This is a phenomenological description of what is happening when we experience the death of an other...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-06Currently, scholars in the fields of trauma and aff...
Our very words for grief are borrowed, in the first place, from animals: a howling, a wailing, a kee...
I feel uneasy stepping into the great territories opened up by Nancy Moules (2017) and Kate Beamer (...
My thesis argues that Søren Kierkegaard provides a perspective on grief that validates emotional exp...
Bearing witness to grief is about accepting and experiencing suffering as an unavoidable aspect of l...
In this editorial, I summon something of the intimate dangers of carefully studying and becoming fam...
The following small reflection was written around a year ago, but it has taken on new urgency for me...
In this article, I explore aspects of grief and the surprising mirroring of hermeneutic research and...
In this paper, the author responds to the Moules and Estefan (2018) Editorial “Watching My Mother Di...
Graduate winner: 2d place, 2020, 33nd Annual Carl Neureuther Student Book Collection Competitio
xxi, 182 leaves ; 29 cm.While a growing body of grief research focuses on how death affects the live...
In this paper, a professor and a group of doctoral students reflect on the video Out of Order: Deali...
In this article, the author performs a re-membering practice that incorporates a relational material...
To comprehend grief, we need knowledge about the range of diverse reactions incorporated within it. ...
This is a phenomenological description of what is happening when we experience the death of an other...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-06Currently, scholars in the fields of trauma and aff...
Our very words for grief are borrowed, in the first place, from animals: a howling, a wailing, a kee...
I feel uneasy stepping into the great territories opened up by Nancy Moules (2017) and Kate Beamer (...
My thesis argues that Søren Kierkegaard provides a perspective on grief that validates emotional exp...
Bearing witness to grief is about accepting and experiencing suffering as an unavoidable aspect of l...
In this editorial, I summon something of the intimate dangers of carefully studying and becoming fam...
The following small reflection was written around a year ago, but it has taken on new urgency for me...