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Robert Kastenbaum, creator of the award-winning "Encyclopedia of
Death," has now collected and edited a source of reliable
information on adult development that is accessible to the general
reader, useable by professionals, and perfect for those who are
simply browsing. This work is a fascinating and highly informative
look at the milestones and ordeals, the key issues, and the
concerns of American adults. The book expands our understanding of
adulthood through 105 articles written by more than 70 contributing
specialists from the fields of psychology, anthropology, religion,
and sociology.
In preparing this special issue of "Omega: The Journal of Death and
Dying" - we choose to consider solidarity in a somewhat larger
perspective than the other one usually adopted by a clear majority
of social support studies. This perspective gives priority to
microscopic, immediate, direct transactions between a focal
individual - the one affected by the prospect of soon to come death
and two classes of people: those included in the core of that
person's personal network and the health care personnel treating
and accompanying soon to die people, many of them already advanced
into agony.
In preparing this special issue of "Omega: The Journal of Death and
Dying" - we choose to consider solidarity in a somewhat larger
perspective than the other one usually adopted by a clear majority
of social support studies. This perspective gives priority to
microscopic, immediate, direct transactions between a focal
individual - the one affected by the prospect of soon to come death
and two classes of people: those included in the core of that
person's personal network and the health care personnel treating
and accompanying soon to die people, many of them already advanced
into agony.
New to this third edition on the psychology of death are chapters
on how we construct death; death in adolescence and adulthood,
including suicide; physician assisted death, regret theory and
denial; new approaches to the role of death anxiety; terror
management theory; and edge theory.
How do our ideas about dying influence the way we live? Life has
often been envisioned as a journey, the river of time carrying us
inexorably toward the unknown country--and in our day we
increasingly turn to myth and magic, ritual and virtual reality,
cloning and cryostasis in the hope of eluding the reality of the
inevitable end. In this book a preeminent and eminently wise writer
on death and dying proposes a new way of understanding our last
transition. A fresh exploration of the final passage through life
and perhaps through death, his work deftly interweaves historical
and contemporary experiences and reflections to demonstrate that we
are always on our way.
Drawing on a remarkable range of observations--from psychology,
anthropology, religion, biology, and personal experience--Robert
Kastenbaum re-envisions life's forward-looking progress, from
early-childhood bedtime rituals to the many small rehearsals we
stage for our final separation. Along the way he illuminates such
moments and ideas as becoming a "corpsed person," going down to
earth or up in flames, respecting or abusing (and eating) the dead,
coping with "too many dead," conceiving and achieving a "good
death," undertaking the journey of the dead, and learning to live
through the scrimmage of daily life fully knowing that Eternity
does not really come in a designer flask. Profound, insightful,
often moving, this look at death as many cultures await it or
approach it enriches our understanding of life as a never-ending
passage.
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