Rituais e significado no luto

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

Abstract

Death as an irrefutable fact is part of the human experience. Consequently we have to deal with the experience of losing significant others and with the repercussions in terms of emotional and cognitive functioning. A historical concept of extreme relevance in this context is the “grief work” (Freud, 1917), which expresses the idea of a painful process centered on loss and pain, with a limited duration in time, that when it is not successfully resolved carries the risk of becoming a pathological mourning. However research in this field suggests that in most cases, the pain associated with grief and sadness disappear without external intervention (Currier, Neimeyer & Berman, 2008) and that, at best, this experience might result in something positive. In this paper, from a literature review of psychological models of grief, we intend to support a broader understanding of this process by exploring the role of grief ritual, today minimized or avoided (Tenezio & Romanoff, 1998), questioning an essentialist and individualistic vision of bereavement (Neimeyer, 2011), whose understanding should respect the processes and social structures in which unfolds.
Original languagePortuguese
Title of host publicationDo reino das sombras
Subtitle of host publicationfigurações da morte
EditorsAna Paula Pinto, Carlos Bizarro Morais, João Amadeu Carvalho da Silva, João Carlos Onofre Pinto, José Cândido Oliveira Martins, Maria José Araújo Ferreira Lopes, Miguel Gonçalves
Place of PublicationBraga
PublisherAletheia – Associação Científica e Cultural
Pages495-504
VolumeBraga
ISBN (Print)9789726972204
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Keywords

  • Social representations of death
  • Grieving process
  • Funeral rituals

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