ABSTRACT

First published in 1974, then reissued in 1986 with a long introduction by the author, which developed the analysis in the light of recent theory and related it to work done in the field since its first publication.

The late Peter Marris shows how understanding grief can help us to understand processes of change, both personal and social, and to handle them with more compassion for ourselves and others. He sees grieving as the working out of a psychological reintegration, whose principles are essentially similar whether the ‘structures of meaning’ of our life fall apart from the loss of a personal relationship, of a predictable social context or of an interpretable world. Marris draws on his wide-ranging research to develop his argument. A study of widows, a description of the devastating effects of urban renewal projects on people whose familiar neighbourhoods are destroyed, an analysis of the activities of tribal associations in Nigeria, and reflections on the analogies between scientific and political revolutions are a few of the studies Marris weaves together in tracing the meaning of change and loss in human life.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction to the First Edition

chapter I|18 pages

The Conservative Impulse

chapter II|20 pages

Bereavement

chapter III|16 pages

Slum Clearance

chapter IV|25 pages

Tribalism

chapter V|20 pages

Mourning and the Projection of Ambivalence

chapter VI|20 pages

The Conservatism in Innovation

chapter VII|23 pages

Incoherence and Social Change

chapter VIII|25 pages

The Management of Change