Routledge Mental Health

Clinical Implications of Family Meaning-Making in Bereavement

cover of Clinical Implications of Family Meaning-Making in Bereavement

By Janice Winchester Nadeau

Series: Series in Death, Dying and Bereavement 

  • List Price: $34.95
  • ISBN: 978-0-415-95626-0
  • Published by: Routledge
  • Publication Date: 08/01/2009
  • Pages: 288
  • Binding(s): Hardback
  • Lecturers/Professors only: request inspection copy

About the Book

Grief is rarely an individual experience, and the impact of a loss can extend far into a family system, and usually has complex and lasting consequences for each member of a family and the family unit as a whole, and the struggle to make sense of a loss, any loss, is often the most difficult part of the grieving process. Drawing from her own extensive clinical background, Dr. Nadeau presents a clinical framework for incorporating the meaning-making process into family discussions both in and out of the therapy room. A powerful vignette, the story of "Laura," an eleven-year old girl who died in her father’s arms after falling from her horse during a routine day of riding, forms a central thread for the book, and subsequent chapters will use her family’s experience to further ground the clinical implications of the material into a real life illustration. This volume will help practitioners from all backgrounds and disciplines to work with families and family members struggling to make sense of a loss.

You may also be interested in:

Women's Reflections on the Complexities of Forgiveness

Wanda Malcolm, Nancy DeCourville, Kathryn Belicki

Published 10/19/2007

This book by women represents a diversity of opinions about every aspect of forgiveness, embodying a tolerance for differing perspectives. The contributors are researchers and therapists who have…

(more)

The Language of Winnicott

Jan Abram, Knud Hjulmand

Published 12/15/2006

No information is currently available online. If you would like to receive information about this title, please email us at: info@psypress.co.uk