Although there is extensive research on the loss of a spouse,
predominantly focusing on the experiences of widows, much less
attention is paid to bereaved partners not married to their
significant other, whether or not the partners are of the same sex.
This first-of-its-kind work explores both socially sanctioned and
disenfranchised grief, highlighting similarities and differences.
Combining a discussion of various theories of grief with personal
narratives of grieving men and women drawn from numerous
interviews, and detailed case study analysis, Carolyn Ambler Walter
has produced a penetrating examination of the bereavement
experiences of partners in varying types of relationships. She
views narratives of widows, widowers, and bereaved domestic gay and
lesbian partners from a postmodern perspective that breaks away
from the traditional belief that the living must detach themselves
from the dead in order to move on with their lives. Instead,
building on the works of postmodern grief theorists such as Klass,
Silverman, and Nickman, Walter views ongoing bonds with the dead as
a resource for enriching functionality in the present, and as a key
to looking to the future.
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