Perspectives On Loss
A Sourcebook
Herausgeber: Harvey, John H
Perspectives On Loss
A Sourcebook
Herausgeber: Harvey, John H
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First Published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
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First Published in 1998. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 388
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 1998
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 224mm x 153mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9780876309100
- ISBN-10: 0876309104
- Artikelnr.: 21084061
- Verlag: Routledge
- Seitenzahl: 388
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Juli 1998
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 224mm x 153mm x 23mm
- Gewicht: 499g
- ISBN-13: 9780876309100
- ISBN-10: 0876309104
- Artikelnr.: 21084061
John H. Harvey
I: Theoretical Perspectives
1: New Directions in Loss Research
2: Blockades to Finding Meaning and Control
3: Disillusionment and the Creation of Value: From Traumatic Losses to Existential Gains
4: Exploring Loss through Autoethnographic Inquiry: Autoethnographic Stories, Co-Constructed Narratives, and Interactive Interviews
5: A Case for Hope in Pain, Loss, and Suffering
6: Trauma and Grief: A Comparative Analysis
II: Losses within Close Relationships
7: The Dissolution of Close Relationships
8: Fatal Attractions: Contradictions in Intimate Relationships
9: Loss in the Experience of Multiracial Couples
10: Curbing Loss in Illness and Disability: A Relationship Perspective
11: Passion Lost and Found
III: Losses Faced by Survivors and Caretakers
12: Implications of Communal Relationships Theory for Understanding Loss among Family Caregivers
13: Brain Injury: A Tapestry of Loss
14: Loss Experienced in Chronic Pain and Illness
15: When a Loss is Due to Suicide: Unique Aspects of Bereavement
16: Mental Health Professionals' Responses to Loss and Trauma of Holocaust Survivors
17: Breaking the Cycle of Genocidal Violence: Healing and Reconciliation
IV: Losses Related to Social Identity
18: The Experience of Loss in Sport
19: What is Lost by Not Losing: Losses Related to Body Weight
20: Homelessness and Loss: Conceptual and Research Considerations
21: Coping with Threat from Intimate Sources: How Self-Protection Relates to Loss for Women
22: Loss of Collective Identity: Self-Sacrifice, Beauty Contests, and Magical Practices
23: Job Loss: Hard Times and Eroded Identity
V: Synthesizing Commentaries on Loss Theory and Research
24: Why There Must Be a Psychology of Loss
25: Can There Be a Psychology of Loss?
26: Issues in the Study of Loss and Grief
1: New Directions in Loss Research
2: Blockades to Finding Meaning and Control
3: Disillusionment and the Creation of Value: From Traumatic Losses to Existential Gains
4: Exploring Loss through Autoethnographic Inquiry: Autoethnographic Stories, Co-Constructed Narratives, and Interactive Interviews
5: A Case for Hope in Pain, Loss, and Suffering
6: Trauma and Grief: A Comparative Analysis
II: Losses within Close Relationships
7: The Dissolution of Close Relationships
8: Fatal Attractions: Contradictions in Intimate Relationships
9: Loss in the Experience of Multiracial Couples
10: Curbing Loss in Illness and Disability: A Relationship Perspective
11: Passion Lost and Found
III: Losses Faced by Survivors and Caretakers
12: Implications of Communal Relationships Theory for Understanding Loss among Family Caregivers
13: Brain Injury: A Tapestry of Loss
14: Loss Experienced in Chronic Pain and Illness
15: When a Loss is Due to Suicide: Unique Aspects of Bereavement
16: Mental Health Professionals' Responses to Loss and Trauma of Holocaust Survivors
17: Breaking the Cycle of Genocidal Violence: Healing and Reconciliation
IV: Losses Related to Social Identity
18: The Experience of Loss in Sport
19: What is Lost by Not Losing: Losses Related to Body Weight
20: Homelessness and Loss: Conceptual and Research Considerations
21: Coping with Threat from Intimate Sources: How Self-Protection Relates to Loss for Women
22: Loss of Collective Identity: Self-Sacrifice, Beauty Contests, and Magical Practices
23: Job Loss: Hard Times and Eroded Identity
V: Synthesizing Commentaries on Loss Theory and Research
24: Why There Must Be a Psychology of Loss
25: Can There Be a Psychology of Loss?
26: Issues in the Study of Loss and Grief
I: Theoretical Perspectives
1: New Directions in Loss Research
2: Blockades to Finding Meaning and Control
3: Disillusionment and the Creation of Value: From Traumatic Losses to Existential Gains
4: Exploring Loss through Autoethnographic Inquiry: Autoethnographic Stories, Co-Constructed Narratives, and Interactive Interviews
5: A Case for Hope in Pain, Loss, and Suffering
6: Trauma and Grief: A Comparative Analysis
II: Losses within Close Relationships
7: The Dissolution of Close Relationships
8: Fatal Attractions: Contradictions in Intimate Relationships
9: Loss in the Experience of Multiracial Couples
10: Curbing Loss in Illness and Disability: A Relationship Perspective
11: Passion Lost and Found
III: Losses Faced by Survivors and Caretakers
12: Implications of Communal Relationships Theory for Understanding Loss among Family Caregivers
13: Brain Injury: A Tapestry of Loss
14: Loss Experienced in Chronic Pain and Illness
15: When a Loss is Due to Suicide: Unique Aspects of Bereavement
16: Mental Health Professionals' Responses to Loss and Trauma of Holocaust Survivors
17: Breaking the Cycle of Genocidal Violence: Healing and Reconciliation
IV: Losses Related to Social Identity
18: The Experience of Loss in Sport
19: What is Lost by Not Losing: Losses Related to Body Weight
20: Homelessness and Loss: Conceptual and Research Considerations
21: Coping with Threat from Intimate Sources: How Self-Protection Relates to Loss for Women
22: Loss of Collective Identity: Self-Sacrifice, Beauty Contests, and Magical Practices
23: Job Loss: Hard Times and Eroded Identity
V: Synthesizing Commentaries on Loss Theory and Research
24: Why There Must Be a Psychology of Loss
25: Can There Be a Psychology of Loss?
26: Issues in the Study of Loss and Grief
1: New Directions in Loss Research
2: Blockades to Finding Meaning and Control
3: Disillusionment and the Creation of Value: From Traumatic Losses to Existential Gains
4: Exploring Loss through Autoethnographic Inquiry: Autoethnographic Stories, Co-Constructed Narratives, and Interactive Interviews
5: A Case for Hope in Pain, Loss, and Suffering
6: Trauma and Grief: A Comparative Analysis
II: Losses within Close Relationships
7: The Dissolution of Close Relationships
8: Fatal Attractions: Contradictions in Intimate Relationships
9: Loss in the Experience of Multiracial Couples
10: Curbing Loss in Illness and Disability: A Relationship Perspective
11: Passion Lost and Found
III: Losses Faced by Survivors and Caretakers
12: Implications of Communal Relationships Theory for Understanding Loss among Family Caregivers
13: Brain Injury: A Tapestry of Loss
14: Loss Experienced in Chronic Pain and Illness
15: When a Loss is Due to Suicide: Unique Aspects of Bereavement
16: Mental Health Professionals' Responses to Loss and Trauma of Holocaust Survivors
17: Breaking the Cycle of Genocidal Violence: Healing and Reconciliation
IV: Losses Related to Social Identity
18: The Experience of Loss in Sport
19: What is Lost by Not Losing: Losses Related to Body Weight
20: Homelessness and Loss: Conceptual and Research Considerations
21: Coping with Threat from Intimate Sources: How Self-Protection Relates to Loss for Women
22: Loss of Collective Identity: Self-Sacrifice, Beauty Contests, and Magical Practices
23: Job Loss: Hard Times and Eroded Identity
V: Synthesizing Commentaries on Loss Theory and Research
24: Why There Must Be a Psychology of Loss
25: Can There Be a Psychology of Loss?
26: Issues in the Study of Loss and Grief