Death, Society, and Human ExperienceAllyn and Bacon, 2001 - 489 pages The landmark text in death education, providing an interdisciplinary approach to understanding death and the dying process. Using case examples and exercises, students can reflect upon their own experiences with death. I have found no better text on the market that deals as fully and as completely with issues of death as Kastenbaum's Death, Society, and Human Experience. It is organized according to the same structural principles as my own lectures and I find it extremely easy to fit into my style. The presentation is very clear and stimulating for students. I have found the Instructor's Manual as useful in preparing lectures and exams as the over-all text is for students. -Andrew Barclay, Michigan State University, reviewer. |
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Résultats 1-3 sur 32
Page 279
... memories for the adults he studied . More recent studies also find death experiences to be common among adults ' earliest memories , as I have also found in some of my own research For example , an Italian - Ameri- can butcher shared ...
... memories for the adults he studied . More recent studies also find death experiences to be common among adults ' earliest memories , as I have also found in some of my own research For example , an Italian - Ameri- can butcher shared ...
Page 333
... memories of their husbands . These were usually comforting thoughts . Although it remained pain- ful to review the events leading up to the death , memories of the husband himself and of shared experiences generally were positive . This ...
... memories of their husbands . These were usually comforting thoughts . Although it remained pain- ful to review the events leading up to the death , memories of the husband himself and of shared experiences generally were positive . This ...
Page 418
... memories that were organized into coherent nar- ratives . The most authentic - sounding memories of Ireland had slipped into her mind from her childhood visit to the World's Fair in St. Louis , where an Irish village had been recreated ...
... memories that were organized into coherent nar- ratives . The most authentic - sounding memories of Ireland had slipped into her mind from her childhood visit to the World's Fair in St. Louis , where an Irish village had been recreated ...
Table des matières
THEY RAISE 10 and Illness? | 18 |
WHAT IS DEATH? | 29 |
DEFINITION OF DEATH 33 Interpretations of The Death State | 41 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
adults advance directive American assisted death become behavior believe bereavement body brain death cancer caregivers cause of death cemetery Chapter child comfort communication concept continue cope dead Death and Dying death anxiety death education death personification death system death-related deceased decision dying person emotional ence euthanasia example family members fear feel funeral grief hemophilia Hippocratic oath Hmong hospice hospice care human individual interactions Jack Kevorkian Journal of Death Kastenbaum Kevorkian killed lives loss loved memories ment mortality mother mourning murder Nancy Cruzan nation Native Americans near-death experience nurses observed Omega pain palliative care parents patient perhaps persistent vegetative physician Press problems programs question relationship response risk sense situation social society stress suffering suicide rate survival survivors terminally ill terrorism thanatology thoughts tion treatment United widows women York young