While there is a significant interdisciplinary and international literature available on death, dying and bereavement, literature addressing responses to death is dominated by assumptions about individuality, framing ‘bereavement’ and ‘grief’ in terms of the inner psychic life of the individual. Scholarly literature tells us little about how the continuing aftermath of death is experienced in the everyday, relational lives of the living. Inspired by research from Majority Worlds, we consider literature that might enable a more ‘relational’ sociological approach, and explore what that might involve. We set out the potential for family sociology to provide an intrinsically (if variable) relational lens on the aftermath of death, along with ...
Methods: As in life at large, ideas of ‘self’ underlie a great deal of theory and practice in palli...
The widely accepted “continuing bonds” model of grief tells us that rather than bereavement necessit...
Death most fundamentally would seem to concern the absence of presence, and the loss of the living e...
© 2023 The Author(s), Article Reuse Guidelines. This is the accepted manuscript version of an articl...
We explore contested meanings around care and relationality through the underexplored case of caring...
At present, end-of-life research, policy and practice typically prioritise the dying individual and ...
© Policy Press 2022. This is the accepted manuscript version of an article which has been published ...
Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment for the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for t...
The need to make sense of one's mortality is of central concern for death studies. We aimed to explo...
To date, the majority of research into a good death has focused on the experience of the person who ...
Bereavement scholars Silverman, Nickman, and Klass (1996) have argued that rituals to continue a rel...
We explore contested meanings around care and relationality through the under-explored case of carin...
The death of an offspring is described as the most traumatic of losses when the death is 'sudden and...
This chapter aims to clarify the relationship between people’s inner and outerworlds in the context ...
Grief is a family affair, yet it is commonly viewed as an individual phenomenon. As an international...
Methods: As in life at large, ideas of ‘self’ underlie a great deal of theory and practice in palli...
The widely accepted “continuing bonds” model of grief tells us that rather than bereavement necessit...
Death most fundamentally would seem to concern the absence of presence, and the loss of the living e...
© 2023 The Author(s), Article Reuse Guidelines. This is the accepted manuscript version of an articl...
We explore contested meanings around care and relationality through the underexplored case of caring...
At present, end-of-life research, policy and practice typically prioritise the dying individual and ...
© Policy Press 2022. This is the accepted manuscript version of an article which has been published ...
Thesis submitted in partial fulfilment for the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for t...
The need to make sense of one's mortality is of central concern for death studies. We aimed to explo...
To date, the majority of research into a good death has focused on the experience of the person who ...
Bereavement scholars Silverman, Nickman, and Klass (1996) have argued that rituals to continue a rel...
We explore contested meanings around care and relationality through the under-explored case of carin...
The death of an offspring is described as the most traumatic of losses when the death is 'sudden and...
This chapter aims to clarify the relationship between people’s inner and outerworlds in the context ...
Grief is a family affair, yet it is commonly viewed as an individual phenomenon. As an international...
Methods: As in life at large, ideas of ‘self’ underlie a great deal of theory and practice in palli...
The widely accepted “continuing bonds” model of grief tells us that rather than bereavement necessit...
Death most fundamentally would seem to concern the absence of presence, and the loss of the living e...