Results 261 to 270 of about 191,619 (287)
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2013
Never before: so much death due to war over so little time. The Great War created an unfamiliar cultural landscape of grieving for mourners, one that seemed as surreal as it was grotesque. The unprecedented scale of the trauma of loss and sorrow left an enduring legacy to those who remained to absorb the impact of individual and national tragedy.
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Never before: so much death due to war over so little time. The Great War created an unfamiliar cultural landscape of grieving for mourners, one that seemed as surreal as it was grotesque. The unprecedented scale of the trauma of loss and sorrow left an enduring legacy to those who remained to absorb the impact of individual and national tragedy.
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[Normal mourning and pathological mourning].
Revue medicale de Bruxelles, 1995The mourning's function and the usual phases of this process are described. Complicated and pathological kinds of mournings are analysed, as well as their inducing circumstances. Adequate behaviours about the therapeutic relation are discussed.
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1999
Abstract Bands so Tight They Cut Your Ears. Skin hot in a small hot room. Skin arms legs hands itching. Days-old sweat. Floor so hard it bruises your knee. Three days and nights on your right side lying. Seven days praying on your knees on the concrete floor. Seven days sleeping on concrete and the same dirty sheet that was clean when
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Abstract Bands so Tight They Cut Your Ears. Skin hot in a small hot room. Skin arms legs hands itching. Days-old sweat. Floor so hard it bruises your knee. Three days and nights on your right side lying. Seven days praying on your knees on the concrete floor. Seven days sleeping on concrete and the same dirty sheet that was clean when
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Pathological Mourning and Childhood Mourning
Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 1963openaire +2 more sources
Abstract Chapter 3, “Mourning,” examines opera’s capacity to mourn colonial trauma. Opera is a melancholy form, shaped by the urge to recover a lost theatrical past. As a genre conditioned by its own losses, its engagement with the work of mourning is hence complex and compromised.
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