It's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapy

The principle aim of this study was to uncover and produce a phenomenological description of the experiences involved when reading and discussing with others a book about death and dying. Although fictional literature is frequently used within bereavement services, there is a dearth of research to s...

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Main Author: Dudley, Helen
Other Authors: King, Nigel ; Durkan, Patricia
Published: University of Huddersfield 2011
Subjects:
155
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.537187
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5371872017-12-24T15:49:45ZIt's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapyDudley, HelenKing, Nigel ; Durkan, Patricia2011The principle aim of this study was to uncover and produce a phenomenological description of the experiences involved when reading and discussing with others a book about death and dying. Although fictional literature is frequently used within bereavement services, there is a dearth of research to support evidence based practice. The methodological design was based on the work of Edmund Husserl, in particular his transcendental phenomenological approach to enquiry. The participants for the study consisted of 11 bereaved young people, four of whom had Down’s syndrome. A therapeutic bereavement session was attended by the group, during which a member of staff read Michael Rosen’s SAD BOOK (Rosen, 2004). Afterwards a series of questions guided and stimulated discussion, gradually leading onto an exploration of their unique experiences. The participants listened, discussed, debated and shared stories, not only about reading the book but of their own grief. The main therapeutic session was video recorded and provided data that included verbal and non-verbal language, together with details of the context in which the interactions took place. The analysis uncovered findings that included: 1) a connection to other bereaved people 2) discussion of crying and sadness 3) a focus on prose and illustrations, especially one page which read: This is me being sad Maybe you think I’m being happy in this picture Really I’m being sad but pretending to be happy I’m doing that because I think people won’t like me if I look sad The findings were transformed to produce a phenomenological description of the experience when reading and discussing with others a book about death and dying. It is anticipated that this research will be of benefit to a wide range of multi-professional staff working with bereaved young people, some of whom may have a learning disability.155H Social Sciences (General)University of Huddersfieldhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.537187http://eprints.hud.ac.uk/id/eprint/11196/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 155
H Social Sciences (General)
spellingShingle 155
H Social Sciences (General)
Dudley, Helen
It's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapy
description The principle aim of this study was to uncover and produce a phenomenological description of the experiences involved when reading and discussing with others a book about death and dying. Although fictional literature is frequently used within bereavement services, there is a dearth of research to support evidence based practice. The methodological design was based on the work of Edmund Husserl, in particular his transcendental phenomenological approach to enquiry. The participants for the study consisted of 11 bereaved young people, four of whom had Down’s syndrome. A therapeutic bereavement session was attended by the group, during which a member of staff read Michael Rosen’s SAD BOOK (Rosen, 2004). Afterwards a series of questions guided and stimulated discussion, gradually leading onto an exploration of their unique experiences. The participants listened, discussed, debated and shared stories, not only about reading the book but of their own grief. The main therapeutic session was video recorded and provided data that included verbal and non-verbal language, together with details of the context in which the interactions took place. The analysis uncovered findings that included: 1) a connection to other bereaved people 2) discussion of crying and sadness 3) a focus on prose and illustrations, especially one page which read: This is me being sad Maybe you think I’m being happy in this picture Really I’m being sad but pretending to be happy I’m doing that because I think people won’t like me if I look sad The findings were transformed to produce a phenomenological description of the experience when reading and discussing with others a book about death and dying. It is anticipated that this research will be of benefit to a wide range of multi-professional staff working with bereaved young people, some of whom may have a learning disability.
author2 King, Nigel ; Durkan, Patricia
author_facet King, Nigel ; Durkan, Patricia
Dudley, Helen
author Dudley, Helen
author_sort Dudley, Helen
title It's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapy
title_short It's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapy
title_full It's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapy
title_fullStr It's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapy
title_full_unstemmed It's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapy
title_sort it's just like ... it's just like what other people feel : a phenomenological exploration of using a children's picture book in the context of bereavement therapy
publisher University of Huddersfield
publishDate 2011
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.537187
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