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OverviewThe third edition of Grieving Beyond Gender explores the different ways that individuals grieve, noting that gender is only one factor that affects an individual’s style or pattern of grief. Inherent in the concept of grieving styles is a notion that gender is fluid and that traditional binary views of gender are belied by the concept of grieving styles, and this is highlighted and explored in more depth in the new edition. Doka and Martin present a model firmly grounded in social science theory and research, and place special emphasis on the model’s clinical implications. Clinicians will come away from this book with concrete tools for supporting different types of grievers through individual counseling or group support. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Kenneth J. Doka (The College of New Rochelle, New York, USA) , Terry L. Martin (Hood College, Maryland, USA)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: 3rd edition Weight: 0.635kg ISBN: 9781032433370ISBN 10: 103243337 Pages: 242 Publication Date: 13 August 2024 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPart One: Definitions and Overview 1. Introduction and Plan of the Book 2. Definitions: Understanding Grief 3. Patterns of Grief and Intuitive Grief 4. Instrumental Grief 5. Dissonant Responses Part Two: Pathways to Patterns 6. Personality as a Shaper of Patterns 7. The Role of Gender 8. Culture as a Shaping Agent Part Three: Implications and Interventions 9. Adaptive Strategies: Implication for Counselors 10. Strategies for Self-Help and Intervention: The Need for Interventive Intentionality 11. ConclusionReviews""This book reminds us of the unique nature of the end of life and that one size does not fit all. It reminds us also of the highly complex, individual nature of grief."" Cruse Bereavement Care ""This is a revised and expanded look at instrumental and intuitive grieving, and it makes for engaging thought-provoking reading. Doka and Martin's book represents a significant advance in thinking about bereavement, grief, and mourning. It offers that rare gift: a powerful conceptual framework for organizing one's whole thinking about doing bereavement research and counseling the bereaved. The ideas of intuitive and instrumental grieving offer conceptual scaffolding both researchers and practitioners can understand and use to communicate with one another. This book contains possibilities for collaboration between researchers and practitioners to bridge the gap that separates them; even more important, it offers possibilities of working together as equals on projects of interest to both."" Death Studies, [35], 2011 ""Grieving Beyond Gender is an important book that challenges widely accepted assumptions about grief... valuable reading not only for clinicians, grief counselors, hospice workers, and other professionals working with the bereaved, but also for graduate students in courses on death, dying, and aging."" Deborah Carr, Psychology of Women Quarterly """This book reminds us of the unique nature of the end of life and that one size does not fit all. It reminds us also of the highly complex, individual nature of grief."" Cruse Bereavement Care ""This is a revised and expanded look at instrumental and intuitive grieving, and it makes for engaging thought-provoking reading. Doka and Martin's book represents a significant advance in thinking about bereavement, grief, and mourning. It offers that rare gift: a powerful conceptual framework for organizing one's whole thinking about doing bereavement research and counseling the bereaved. The ideas of intuitive and instrumental grieving offer conceptual scaffolding both researchers and practitioners can understand and use to communicate with one another. This book contains possibilities for collaboration between researchers and practitioners to bridge the gap that separates them; even more important, it offers possibilities of working together as equals on projects of interest to both."" Death Studies, [35], 2011 ""Grieving Beyond Gender is an important book that challenges widely accepted assumptions about grief... valuable reading not only for clinicians, grief counselors, hospice workers, and other professionals working with the bereaved, but also for graduate students in courses on death, dying, and aging."" Deborah Carr, Psychology of Women Quarterly" Author InformationKenneth J. Doka, PhD, is professor emeritus in the graduate school of the College of New Rochelle and senior vice president of the Hospice Foundation of America. He has written or edited more than 40 books and more than 100 journal articles and book chapters. Terry L. Martin, PhD, was an associate professor of psychology and thanatology at Hood College prior to his death. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |