Death-Related Grief and Disenfranchised Identity: A Communication Approach

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Bibliographic Details
Authors and Corporations: Barney, Kendyl A. (Author), Yoshimura, Stephen M. (Author)
published: 2020
Media Type: Book, E-Book

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further information
Item Description: Veröffentlichungsversion
begutachtet (peer reviewed)
In: Review of Communication Research ; 8 (2020) ; 78-95
DOI: https://doi.org/10.12840/ISSN.2255-4165.024
Language: English
Subjects:
Tod
Collection: SSOAR Social Science Open Access Repository
Table of Contents

The death of a significant person in one’s life forces individuals to engage in a number of grief-related tasks, including reconstructing a narrative about the relationship, resituating their relationship with the deceased individual, and developing a new sense of self post-loss. The dominant narrative of grief, however, generally assumes that the experience is a finite, linear process of detachment. Given past research challenging the reality of that experience, we draw upon Doka’s (2002) theory of disenfranchised grief to propose that grief is not only a possible temporary state of disenfranchisement, but rather a perpetual, ongoing state of being disenfranchised. This condition is primarily maintained by the need to constantly navigate the lines between the dominant narrative of grief upheld in a given culture and one’s personal experience and performance of it. We propose a narrative approach to the concept of grief as a potential solution to this problem, and outline several new potential avenues for research on grief.