Death and Dying
An Annotated Bibliography of the Thanatological Literature- Authors:
- Publisher:
- 2009
Summary
While it can be traced to the 1700s, the term thanatology has gained traction in recent decades to refer to the study of death. Because of the breadth of the published material and the challenges of discovery in large bibliographic databases and catalogs, finding and identifying monographic material on death, dying, grief, and bereavement can be extremely challenging. Although there have been several bibliographical resources published on thanatology, those titles were incomplete, limited in scope, or leaned heavily toward one area of the field.
In Death and Dying: An Annotated Bibliography of the Thanatological Literature, John F. Szabo provides more than 2,200 citations of monographs on the science and study of death and dying. Among the areas this volume addresses are the psychological, philosophical, and attitudinal aspects; coping and dealing with the burdens of caregiving and working in the helping professions; instructional and educational topics for practitioners, primarily health care providers; cultural differences in bereavement rituals; and grief, mourning, and loss. In addition, notable titles on or relating to death and dying in popular culture, death themes in literature, methods of death, or specific ethical, policy, or public issues are also included when they contribute important information to subject areas on which the book focuses. This book will be helpful to students, researchers, academics, caregivers, health care professionals, psychologists, social workers, and anyone with an interest in death, dying, bereavement, or the care of the terminally ill.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2009
- ISBN-Print
- 978-0-8108-7275-2
- ISBN-Online
- 978-0-8108-7276-9
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 376
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Introduction No access
- Ch01. Adolescents No access Pages 1 - 5
- Ch02. Aging and Death No access Pages 6 - 10
- Ch03. Attitudes toward Death No access Pages 11 - 17
- Ch04. Bibliographies No access Pages 18 - 22
- Ch05. Childhood Bereavement No access Pages 23 - 40
- Ch06. Communication about Death No access Pages 41 - 45
- Ch07. Coping and Caregivers No access Pages 46 - 56
- Ch08. Cross-Cultural Views on Death and Dying No access Pages 57 - 71
- Ch09. Death Education No access Pages 72 - 79
- Ch10. The Death of a Child No access Pages 80 - 91
- Ch11. Dying No access Pages 92 - 112
- Ch12. Eschatology No access Pages 113 - 115
- Ch13. Ethical Issues No access Pages 116 - 124
- Ch14. Fear of Death No access Pages 125 - 127
- Ch15. General Works No access Pages 128 - 148
- Ch16. Grief and Mourning No access Pages 149 - 192
- Ch17. Historical Views of Death and Dying No access Pages 193 - 199
- Ch18. Hospice No access Pages 200 - 212
- Ch19. Immortality No access Pages 213 - 215
- Ch20. Legal and Financial Issues No access Pages 216 - 219
- Ch21. Mental Health Issues No access Pages 220 - 224
- Ch22. Miscellaneous No access Pages 225 - 226
- Ch23. Near-Death Experiences No access Pages 227 - 230
- Ch24. Nursing No access Pages 231 - 233
- Ch25. Palliative Care No access Pages 234 - 241
- Ch26. Parental Loss and Grief No access Pages 242 - 248
- Ch27. Pastoral Care No access Pages 249 - 256
- Ch28. Philosophical Studies No access Pages 257 - 264
- Ch29. Practitioner Education No access Pages 265 - 275
- Ch30. Rituals No access Pages 276 - 281
- Ch31. Sibling Loss and Grief No access Pages 282 - 284
- Ch32. Thanatology No access Pages 285 - 288
- Ch33. Widowhood No access Pages 289 - 300
- Name Index No access Pages 301 - 326
- Title Index No access Pages 327 - 374
- About the Author No access Pages 375 - 376





