This important book draws together new research and theories about bereavement, on the one hand, and men and masculinities on the other, to increase our understanding of mens experience of loss and contribute towards improving support services to men following bereavement.
Bereavement and loss are unavoidable events in life and can be challenging experiences for anyone, regardless of gender. However, in contemporary western cultures, mens experience of bereavement continues to be framed by socially constructed ideas surrounding masculinity, which dictate that men must be stoic following a loss, with grief manifesting in either anger or despair. Men who do not grieve in accepted masculine ways can feel judged, alienated or disenfranchised. This interdisciplinary and interprofessional collection presents theoretical analysis, reports of research findings, reviews of support and interventions, and a wealth of personal accounts. It includes chapters discussing partner loss, childhood bereavement, perinatal loss and bereavement through suicide, as well as bereavement at all stages of the life course.
Men and Loss is an essential read for advanced students and researchers with an interest in mens health and bereavement studies from a range of disciplinary backgrounds, including nursing, medicine, counselling, sociology, social work and psychology.
This important book draws together new research and theories about bereavement, on one hand, and men and masculinities on the other. This is an essential read for advanced students and researchers with an interest in mens health and bereavement studies from a range of disciplines, including medicine, counselling, sociology and psychology.
Introduction 1 The loss of my son defines me: masculinity, identity
and bereavement 2 The loss of a same sex partner: gay and masculine identity
in mens experience of bereavement 3 Land of our fathers: an exploration of
the sons grief Be a good boy: four midlife men reflect on the experience
of early motherloss 5 Fathering a dead baby: men, masculinities and pregnancy
loss 6 Reflections on personal narratives of grief: an autoethnographic
account 7 Exploring male grief narratives through a personal and professional
lens 8 Uncovering prolonged grief disorder: a survivors story 9 Mens
experience of grief and loss across dual emotional domains 10 Self-inflicted
death of care experienced men in custody, through a lens of loss 11 Men and
grief: reconceptualising UK bereavement support to be inclusive of men 12
Young men experiencing grief: different types of emotional expression 13
Bereavement support group? No thanks! Im dating 14 Theyre just not
talking about it: a male practitioners view 15 Breaking the silence:
understanding the complexities of bereavement and grief among Syrian refugee
fathers in England 16 We cant play with them, but we can play for them:
fathers uniting in grief through football
Kerry Jones is a Senior Lecturer in End-of-Life Care at The Open University, where her research and teaching focus on death, dying, grief and bereavement and end-of-life care. Kerry has published and presented her research on mens experience of loss, stillbirth neonatal death, parental bereavement, paediatric palliative care, brain injury, dementia and suicide. More recently, her focus has turned to the impact of loss during the COVID-19 pandemic, in particular mens grief, death anxiety among children and young people, and healthcare workers experiences. Kerry has been an academic consultant on death and dying for programmes for national media, including A Time to Live on BBC 2, and for BBC Radio 3.
Martin Robb is a Senior Lecturer in Health and Social Care at The Open University, where his research has focused on issues of gender and care and has included studies of fatherhood, men working in childcare and young masculinities. He is the author of Men, Masculinities and the Care of Children: Images, Ideas and Identities (Routledge, 2020). Martin is co-editor of the journal Children & Society and host of the Careful Thinking podcast. He was the academic advisor for the BBC3 documentary James Arthur: Out of our Minds, which explored issues in mens mental health.