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Men don't cry-- women do : transcending gender stereotypes of grief / Terry L. Martin and Kenneth J. Doka.

By: Contributor(s): Series: Series in death, dying, and bereavementPublication details: Philadelphia, Penn. : Brunner/Mazel, ©2000.Description: xiv, 188 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 0876309945
  • 9780876309940
  • 0876309953
  • 9780876309957
Subject(s): NLM classification:
  • 2000 F-233
  • BF 575.G7
Contents:
Foreword / Therese A. Rando, Ph. D. -- Patterns of Grief -- Dissonant Responses -- Pathways to the Patterns -- Theoretical Basis for Patterns of Grief -- Personality as a Shaper of Patterns -- The Role of Gender -- Culture as a Shaping Agent -- Implications and Interventions -- Adaptive Strategies: Implications for Counselors -- Strategies for Self-Help and Intervention: The Need for Interventive Intentionality.
Review: "Do men and women grieve differently? This new text offers a refreshing change from the popular gender stereotypes of grief, emphasizing that there are many healthy ways to cope with grief. Two specific patterns of grieving are examined: an intuitive pattern where individuals experience and express grief in an affective way (stereotyped as female); and an instrumental pattern where grief is expressed physically or cognitively (stereotyped as male). A third pattern representing a blending of these two is also introduced. The authors vehemently point out that such patterns are related to, but not determined by, gender, and each has distinct strengths and weaknesses."--Jacket.
List(s) this item appears in: Grief / Lament / Sorrow

Includes bibliographical references (pages 169-181) and index.

Foreword / Therese A. Rando, Ph. D. -- Patterns of Grief -- Dissonant Responses -- Pathways to the Patterns -- Theoretical Basis for Patterns of Grief -- Personality as a Shaper of Patterns -- The Role of Gender -- Culture as a Shaping Agent -- Implications and Interventions -- Adaptive Strategies: Implications for Counselors -- Strategies for Self-Help and Intervention: The Need for Interventive Intentionality.

"Do men and women grieve differently? This new text offers a refreshing change from the popular gender stereotypes of grief, emphasizing that there are many healthy ways to cope with grief. Two specific patterns of grieving are examined: an intuitive pattern where individuals experience and express grief in an affective way (stereotyped as female); and an instrumental pattern where grief is expressed physically or cognitively (stereotyped as male). A third pattern representing a blending of these two is also introduced. The authors vehemently point out that such patterns are related to, but not determined by, gender, and each has distinct strengths and weaknesses."--Jacket.

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