Skip to main content
Taylor & Francis Group Logo
Advanced Search

Click here to search books using title name,author name and keywords.

  • Login
  • Hi, User  
    • Your Account
    • Logout
Advanced Search

Click here to search books using title name,author name and keywords.

Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.

Book

Loss

Book

Loss

DOI link for Loss

Loss book

Developmental, Cultural, and Clinical Realms

Loss

DOI link for Loss

Loss book

Developmental, Cultural, and Clinical Realms
BySalman Akhtar
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2019
eBook Published 6 December 2019
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429356094
Pages 270
eBook ISBN 9780429356094
Subjects Behavioral Sciences
Share
Share

Get Citation

Akhtar, S. (2019). Loss: Developmental, Cultural, and Clinical Realms (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429356094

ABSTRACT

The experience of loss is ubiquitous in human life, but its nature and impact have great variations. When loss is phase-specific, expected, and accompanied by compensatory supplies, it can lead to ego growth. When loss is untimely, unexpected, and unaccompanied by environmental 'holding,' it becomes traumatic and needs clinical attention.

This edited volume brings together a distinguished cadre of international contributors in order to explain the multifaceted and nuanced nature of loss from a variety of different perspectives. These clinicians, administrators, and writers delineate the great variability in the setting, antecedents, and consequences of loss. Development-facilitating and development-impeding losses are addressed and so are the losses that seem inevitable as one moves from childhood through adolescence and young adulthood to midlife and old age. Loss experienced by institutional organizations and war-torn societies is also examined. The book’s ultimate focus is clinical: it highlights the many technical dilemmas in working with grieving patients and offers therapeutic strategies aimed at ameliorating their anguish.

Loss: Developmental, Cultural, and Clinical Realms will appeal to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists both in practice and training from a variety of different backgrounds.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

BySalman Akhtar

part Part I|2 pages

Developmental realm

chapter 1|19 pages

The Development Impeding and the Development Facilitating Role of Loss in Childhood

ByAnn Smolen

chapter 2|16 pages

Developmental, Actual, and Imaginary Losses during Adolescence

ByJennifer Mariko Neuwalder

chapter 3|25 pages

Loss during middle and old age

ByJulian Stern

part Part II|2 pages

Cultural realm

chapter 4|18 pages

Loss in organizations

ByPhilip Stokoe

chapter 5|14 pages

The spectrum of loss in war-torn societies

ByAleksandar Dimitrijević

chapter 6|23 pages

A poetics of loss 1

ByMartina Kolb

chapter 7|23 pages

Three movies focusing on loss and bereavement

BySalman Akhtar, Beverly Shin

part Part III|2 pages

Clinical realm

chapter 8|21 pages

Loss as the relational basis of the self and the politics of mourning

ByClara Mucci

chapter 9|26 pages

Manifestations and management of childhood parental loss in adult patients

BySalman Akhtar

chapter 10|12 pages

Loss, need, and omnipotence

BySuzanne Benser

chapter 11|18 pages

Between diagnosis and death

ByIşil Vahip

chapter 12|9 pages

Therapists’ Reactions to Patients’ Death

BySybil Houlding
T&F logoTaylor & Francis Group logo
  • Policies
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Cookie Policy
  • Journals
    • Taylor & Francis Online
    • CogentOA
    • Taylor & Francis Online
    • CogentOA
  • Corporate
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
  • Help & Contact
    • Students/Researchers
    • Librarians/Institutions
    • Students/Researchers
    • Librarians/Institutions
  • Connect with us

Connect with us

Registered in England & Wales No. 3099067
5 Howick Place | London | SW1P 1WG © 2021 Informa UK Limited