Results for 'mourning'

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  1.  13
    Mourning in Late Imperial China. Filial Piety and the State. Norman Kutcher.T. H. Barrett - 2000 - Buddhist Studies Review 17 (1):103-105.
    Mourning in Late Imperial China. Filial Piety and the State. Norman Kutcher. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1999. xiv, 210 pp. £40.00, US $64.95. ISBN 0-521-62439-8.
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  2.  21
    Mourning and Translation as Topological Events.Pablo B. Sanchez Gomez - 2022 - Derrida Today 15 (2):210-224.
    Derrida’s thought is a dynamic dimension, a movement beyond any attempt of conclusive definition. However, is there any possibility to grasp this task of endless destabilization? This paper brings up the proposal of reading Derrida’s work from the close but at the same time aporetical relation between place and space. In this sense, we question the common understanding of space as uniform and empty continuum where place would be just a ‘limit’, a perimeter. In order to do so, we will (...)
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  3. Tele-Mournings: Actuvirtual Events and Shared Responsibilities.Thomas Clément Mercier - 2020 - Derrida Today 13 (2):189-197.
    This thought piece dealing with the Covid-19 ‘crisis’ was written – in the form of a diary that runs from February to July 2020 – for a special issue of Derrida Today entitled ‘Fire, Flood, Pestilence and Protest’, edited by Nicole Anderson, and published in November 2020. The piece deals with matters of biopolitics, telecommunication, death and mourning through Derrida and Agamben, and interrogates the eventness of what is called an ‘event’.
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  4.  63
    Mourning the frozen: considering the relational implications of cryonics.Robin Hillenbrink & Christopher Simon Wareham - 2024 - Journal of Medical Ethics 50 (6):388-391.
    Cryonics is the preservation of legally dead human bodies at the temperature of liquid nitrogen in the hope that future technologies will be able to revive them. In philosophical debates surrounding this practice, arguments often focus on prudential implications of cryopreservation, or moral arguments on a societal level. In this paper, we claim that this debate is incomplete, since it does not take into account a significant relational concern about cryonics. Specifically, we argue that attention should be paid to the (...)
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  5. Mourning and the Recognition of Value.Cathy Mason & Matt Dougherty - 2022 - In Mikolaj Slawkowski-Rode (ed.), The Meaning of Mourning: Perspectives on Death, Loss, and Grief. Lexington Books.
    If mourning is a proof of value, how could it be appropriate to move on when one has truly loved and valued someone? Assuming that it is appropriate to value others extremely highly – perhaps even infinitely – how could it ever make sense for one’s grief to abate? Do loss and proper mourning thus present us with a choice between living well and loving well? This paper aims to vindicate the pressing nature of these questions while arguing (...)
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  6.  60
    Mourning becomes the law: philosophy and representation.Gillian Rose - 1996 - New York: Cambridge University Press.
    In Mourning Becomes the Law, Gillian Rose takes us beyond the impasse of post-modernism or 'despairing rationalism withour reason'. Arguing that the post-modern search for a 'new ethics' and ironic philosophy are incoherent, she breathes new life into the debates concerning power and domination, transcendence and eternity. Mourning Becomes the Law is the philosophical counterpart to Gillian Rose's highly acclaimed memoir Love's Work. She extends similar clarity and insight to discussions of architecture, cinema, painting and poetry, through which (...)
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  7.  26
    Mourning and Metonymy: Bearing Witness Between Women and Generations.Sara Murphy - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (4):144-168.
    Drucilla Cornell's Legacies of Dignity: Between Women and Generations proposes a feminist ethics of self-representation that asks what exclusions are necessary to autobiography's constructions of identity. Focusing on the ways in which alterity, particularly linked with figures of the mother, are silenced, it advances a mourning that is transformational. I question Cornell's use of a Kantian concept of dignity and suggest that Irigaray's engagement with Levinas offers another way of conceptualizing the problematic.
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  8.  24
    Virtual Mourning and Memory Construction on Facebook: Here Are the Terms of Use.Kathleen Scheaffer & Rhonda N. McEwen - 2013 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 33 (3-4):64-75.
    This article investigates the online information practices of persons grieving and mourning via Facebook. It examines how, or whether, these practices and Facebook’s terms of use policies have implications for the bereaved and/or the memory of the deceased. To explore these questions, we compared traditional publicly recorded asynchronous modes of grieving (i.e., obituaries) with Facebook’s asynchronous features (i.e., pages, photos, messages, profiles, comments). Additionally, by applying observational techniques to Facebook memorial pages and Facebook profiles, conducting a survey, and interviewing (...)
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  9.  23
    Mourning Denied: The Tabooed Subject.Claudia Leeb - 2019 - In Alexander Keller Hirsch & David W. McIvor (eds.), The Democratic Arts of Mourning: Political Theory and Loss. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 65-82.
    This chapter shows that taboos erected around crimes inhibit individuals and nations' work of mourning for the victims of crimes. The work of mourning is the precondition that individuals and nations take responsibility for past crimes, show solidarity with the victims and their descendants, and make sure that such crimes are not repeated. I bring Theodor W. Adorno and Sigmund Freud in conversation to explain the connection between taboos and the failure to mourn. I further detail this connection (...)
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  10.  51
    Putting Mourning to Work.Karen J. Engle - 2007 - Theory, Culture and Society 24 (1):61-88.
    This article investigates the work of mourning following the terrorist attacks in New York and Washington on September 11, 2001. Combining discussions of mourning, kitsch and sentimentality, I examine the perverse transformation of grief into patriotic nationalism. Linking Freud’s description of mourning as work with Derrida’s articulation of grief as ‘a work working at its own unproductivity’, I explore how grief has been paired with icons of American nostalgia, such as Norman Rockwell, as well as kitschy souvenirs (...)
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  11.  75
    Mourning and Melancholia: Reading the Symposium.Bruce Benjamin Rosenstock - 2004 - Philosophy and Literature 28 (2):243-258.
    The characters Apollodorus and Alcibiades represent the melancholic and manic poles of what Freud calls the "cyclic disease" in "Mourning and Melancholia." Plato conceives of erôs as entrapped within cycles of pleasure and pain, filling and emptying, until the self recognizes its overfullness — that is, its pregnancy. Socrates embodies the "out-of-placeness" (atopia) that overfullness signifies in a world characterized by emptying and filling, the "whole tragedy and comedy of life" as the Philebus puts it. As a lure for (...)
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  12.  31
    Self-mourning in Paradise: Writing (about) AIDS through Death-bed Delirium.James N. Agar - 2007 - Paragraph 30 (1):67-84.
    This article discusses the representation of AIDS in Guibert's posthumously published novel Le Paradis. The novel is situated in relation to Guibert's better known previous AIDS writings. The article proposes that Guibert's AIDS works fall in to three related categories: writings about other peoples' AIDS; autobiographical writings about AIDS, and, in the third, terminal stage in which Le Paradis fits, writing AIDS. As such the article suggests that Le Paradis manages to reflect and communicate some of the trauma of living (...)
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  13.  59
    Mourning and Forgiveness as Sites of Reconciliation Pedagogies.Michalinos Zembylas - 2011 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 8 (3):257-265.
    This paper explores mourning and forgiveness not simply as sources of existential, political, or emotional meaning, but primarily as possible sites of reconciliation pedagogies . Reconciliation pedagogies are public and school pedagogical practices that examine how certain ideas can enrich our thinking and action toward reconciliation—not through a moralistic agenda but through an approach that views such ideas both constructively and critically. Mourning and forgiveness may constitute valuable points of departure for reconciliation pedagogies, if common pain is acknowledged (...)
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  14. The Mourning After: Statius Thebaid 12.Victoria E. Pagán - 2000 - American Journal of Philology 121 (3):423-452.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:American Journal of Philology 121.3 (2000) 423-452 [Access article in PDF] The Mourning After: Statius Thebaid 12 Victoria E. Pagán Wie er auf dem letzten Hügel, der ihm ganz sein Tal noch einmal zeigt, sich wendet, anhält, weilt--, so leben wir und nehmen immer Abschied. As he, on the last hill, which shows him his valley one last time, turns back, stops, lingers--, so we live and ever (...)
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  15.  23
    Mourning and Intermittence between Proust and Barthes.Jennifer Rushworth - 2016 - Paragraph 39 (3):269-287.
    This essay explores the relationship between mourning and writing by tracing the various uses and connotations of the term ‘intermittence’ in the writings of Marcel Proust and Roland Barthes, with particular reference to the middle volume of A la recherche du temps perdu, Sodome et Gomorrhe, and to Barthes's posthumously published Journal de deuil. Against the backdrop of the Proustian ‘Intermittences of the Heart’, I demonstrate that intermittence is a useful interpretive framework for Barthes's Journal de deuil in terms (...)
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  16.  61
    Interview: Mourning Is a Political Act Amid the Pandemic and Its Disparities.Judith Butler & George Yancy - 2020 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 17 (4):483-487.
    This conversation between a feminist and a critical whiteness scholar addresses the politics of vulnerability to COVID-19 and the questions of what it means to mobilize and learn from private grief and mass mourning and the role of academia and intellectuals in the current crisis.
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  17.  74
    Toward an anatomy of mourning: Discipline, devotion and liberation in a Freudian-buddhist framework.Nalini Bhushan - 2008 - Sophia 47 (1):57-69.
    In this essay I first articulate what I take to be an influential and for the most part persuasive model in the western psychoanalytic tradition that is a response to tragic loss, namely, the one that we find in Freud’s little essay entitled ‘Mourning and Melancholia’ (1917). I then use a well-known Buddhist folk tale about the plight of a young woman named Kisagotami to underscore central elements from Buddhist psychology on the subject of suffering that is a consequence (...)
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  18.  10
    Mourning as a Clinical Category, Mourning as an Ethical-Political Category: Butlerian Developments.Ernani Chaves & Nilton Chagas - 2021 - Revista de Filosofia Moderna E Contemporânea 9 (2):151-174.
    This article intends to run through the appropriation made by Judith Butler about the theme of mourning, and how this concept is modified and mixed in her work, when she works it initially in a debate as an inceptive political category and more radically in its clinical meaning in Psychic Life of Power, until her transition work and the theoretical construction of her ethics and/or political philosophy in Precarious Life, a book in which she will explicitly develop mourning (...)
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  19.  58
    Mourning or Melancholia.J. Melvin Woody - 2009 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 16 (3):245-247.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Mourning or MelancholiaJ. Melvin Woody (bio)Keywords“objective correlative”, depression, grief, cognitive-affective dissonanceIn a celebrated and controversial critical essay, T.S. Eliot faults Shakespeare's Hamlet on the grounds that the playwright has not provided sufficient “objective correlative” for the moods of his melancholy Dane. For lack of the “complete adequacy of the external to the emotion” that he finds in Shakespeare's other tragedies, Eliot judges that “the play is almost certainly (...)
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  20.  56
    Influences on Freud's Mourning and Melancholia and its contextual validity.David J. A. Dozois - 2000 - Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology 20 (2):167-195.
    This article critically evaluates S. Freud's Mourning and Melancholia and challenges both the celebratory and reactionary views that treat this essay as an ahistorical and decontextualized "foundation-stone" of depression. Although many biographies have been written on Freud, the possible influences on his thinking in the area grief and depression have not been examined. Moreover, no reviews have investigated Freud's understanding of mourning and melancholia from the perspective of his own experiences with these difficulties. Following a brief overview of (...)
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  21.  32
    Mourning Mayberry: Guns, Masculinity, and Socioeconomic Decline.Jennifer Carlson - 2015 - Gender and Society 29 (3):386-409.
    This study uses in-depth interviews and participant observation with gun carriers in Michigan to examine how socioeconomic decline shapes the appropriation of guns by men of diverse class and race backgrounds. Gun carriers nostalgically referenced the decline of Mayberry America—a version of America characterized by the stable employment of male breadwinners and low crime rates. While men of color and poor and working-class men bear the material brunt of these transformations, this narrative of decline impacts how both privileged and marginalized (...)
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  22.  50
    Mourning and Subjectivity: From Bersani to Proust, Klein, and Freud.L. Scott Lerner - 2007 - Diacritics 37 (1):41-53.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Mourning and SubjectivityFrom Bersani to Proust, Klein, and FreudL. Scott Lerner (bio)Near the end of his recent essay “Psychoanalysis and the Aesthetic Subject,” Leo Bersani makes an unexpected conceptual turn, briefly adopting a vocabulary of “human destiny” [174]. Jacques Derrida made a similar move in 2003 when he dropped his guard, abandoning the language of critical exposition to point out, with uncharacteristic bluntness (“de façon plus crue” [18]), (...)
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  23.  8
    Mourning, Solidarity, and "Transversal Grief": How Judith Butler Misreads Paris.R. A. Berman - 2016 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2016 (175):195-199.
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  24.  25
    In Mourning.Paulette Callen - 1987 - Between the Species 3 (1):3.
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  25.  8
    Mourning and Forgiveness of the Death. 공병혜 - 2020 - Journal of the Daedong Philosophical Association 92:23-45.
    이 글은 우리의 삶에서 불가피하게 직면할 수밖에 없는 고인의 죽음을 기억하는 애도와 용서하는 과정에 대해 고찰해 보기로 한다. 애도란 고인이 된 그를 기억해야만 한다는 기 억의 의무 속에서 작동 한다. 사랑하는 사람에 대한 애도는 인간의 사멸성의 깨달음과 동 시에 사랑하는 사람을 온전한 타자로 받아들어 새로운 연민의 주체로 태어나게 할 수 있 다. 그러나 진정한 애도란 고인과의 상처받은 기억을 치유하는 용서의 과정을 통해서이다. 애도하는 자는 고인에게 상처를 준 과거의 행위에 대해 책임을 묻고 이를 인정하며 이와는 다른 행위를 할 수 있는 주체가 (...)
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  26.  7
    Memory, Mourning, and the Chilean Constitution.María López Ríos, Christopher Jude McCarroll & Paloma Muñoz Gómez - 2024 - Revista de Humanidades de Valparaíso 26:159-177.
    The present paper investigates and provides an account of the feeling of grief evidenced in certain sectors of the Chilean population after the electoral defeat following the constitutional plebiscite of September 2022 in Chile. How can one experience grief at the rejection of a political referendum? We suggest that the experience of grief is importantly related to a loss of life possibilities and disruptions in one’s practical identity. The outpouring of grief experienced by many Chileans at this political loss can (...)
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  27. Mourning and Metonymy: Bearing Witness Between Women and Generations.Sara Murphy - 2004 - Hypatia 19 (4):142-166.
    Drucilla Cornell's Legacies of Dignity: Between Women and Generations proposes a feminist ethics of self-representation that asks what exclusions are necessary to autobiography's constructions of identity. Focusing on the ways in which alterity, particularly linked with figures of the mother, are silenced, it advances a mourning that is transformational. I question Cornell's use of a Kantian concept of dignity and suggest that Irigaray's engagement with Levinas offers another way of conceptualizing the problematic.
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  28.  49
    The Work of Mourning.Jacques Derrida - 2001 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Edited by Pascale-Anne Brault & Michael Naas.
    But he also inspires the respect that comes from an illustrious career, and, among many who were his colleagues and peers, he inspired friendship. The Work of Mourning is a collection that honors those friendships in the wake of passing.
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  29.  60
    Beyond mourning and melancholia: Nostalgia, anger and the challenges of political action.Nancy Luxon - 2016 - Contemporary Political Theory 15 (2):139-159.
    Political theorists have increasingly adopted the psychoanalytic language of ‘mourning’ to characterize experiences of loss and injury, and to legitimate these as claims about a past political or cultural order. Mourning would seek to work through these experiences while opening persons to their shared vulnerabilities. With this article, I return to Freud’s original distinction between mourning and melancholia, along with its development through the work of Donald Winnicott and the relational school of psychoanalysis. Although psychoanalytic mourning (...)
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  30.  51
    Mourning Nature: Hope at the Heart of Ecological Grief and Loss ed. by Ashlee Cunsolo and Karen Landman.Alan E. Stewart - 2018 - Ethics and the Environment 23 (1):79-86.
    If C.S. Lewis' A Grief Observed can be considered an account of a lost human relationship, then Cunsolo and Landman's Mourning Nature forms a posthuman, but nonetheless personal, examination of the losses of relationships with plants, animals, and even entire ecosystems—an ecological grief observed. In this regard, one of the motivations for this book was Cunsolo's interviews with Inuit residents who experienced profound sadness and despair at the changes in the landscape brought by climate change. Beyond this, each of (...)
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  31.  11
    Patriarchal nature of mourning from an African perspective.Hundzukani P. Khosa-Nkatini - 2022 - HTS Theological Studies 78 (2):7.
    It is common in African culture for a widow to wear black or navy clothes as a sign of mourning her husband upon his death. Widows in Africa are expected to mourn for a certain period. In South Africa, most African ethnic groups expect them to mourn for a period of 12 months. Vows in the western culture state ‘until death do us part’, but this is not the case in the African traditions. A widow is still considered married (...)
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  32.  18
    Mourning Animals: Rituals and Practices Surrounding Animal Death.Sabrina Tonutti - 2018 - Journal of Animal Ethics 8 (1):114-116.
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  33.  24
    The Work of Mourning.Pascale-Anne Brault & Michael Naas (eds.) - 2003 - University of Chicago Press.
    Jacques Derrida is, in the words of the_ New York Times_, "perhaps the world's most famous philosopher—if not the only famous philosopher." He often provokes controversy as soon as his name is mentioned. But he also inspires the respect that comes from an illustrious career, and, among many who were his colleagues and peers, he inspired friendship. _The Work of Mourning_ is a collection that honors those friendships in the wake of passing. Gathered here are texts—letters of condolence, memorial essays, (...)
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  34.  37
    Mourning Happiness: Narrative and the Politics of Modernity.Vivasvan Soni - 2010 - Cornell University Press.
    Solon's cryptic injunction : "Call no man happy until dead" -- A mourning happiness : the Athenian funeral oration -- Difficult happiness : the case of tragedy -- Aristotle's hermeneutic of happiness : the first forgetting -- The trial narrative in Richardson's Pamela : suspending the hermeneutic of happiness -- Effects of the trial narrative on the concept of happiness -- Marriage plot -- The tragedies of sentimentalism -- Kantian ethics and the discourses of modernity -- Happiness in revolution (...)
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  35.  55
    Method Mourning: Xunzi on Ritual Performance.Thomas Radice - 2017 - Philosophy East and West 67 (2):466-493.
    Xunzi's 荀子 essay, "A Discussion of Rituals" is the earliest attempt in early China to theorize at length about the nature and importance of rituals. This essay is crucial to understanding the importance of ritual in Xunzi's philosophy of self-cultivation, of which there is no shortage of analysis.1 Most of this analysis centers on the notion of ritual in general, but Xunzi's essay also reveals his reaction to several criticisms to specific ritual practices, especially mourning rituals and ancestral sacrifices, (...)
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  36.  13
    Mourning a Father Lost: A Kibbutz Childhood Remembered.Rachel Elboim-Dror - 2005 - Utopian Studies 16 (1):155-159.
  37. Multiculturalism, mourning, and the Americas: Towards a new pragmatics of cross-cultural and intercultural criticism.G. Gunn - 1996 - Filozofia 51 (12):838-844.
     
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  38.  41
    Mourning professor Feng Youlan by engaging in serious philosophical discussion today.Li Zehou - 1994 - Journal of Chinese Philosophy 21 (3-4):471-480.
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  39.  18
    Mourning, melancholia, and race now.Jermaine Singleton - 2019 - Contemporary Political Theory 18 (4):219-225.
  40.  24
    Mourning the Dead, Following the Living.Kyle B. T. Lambelet - 2019 - Journal of Religious Ethics 47 (3):583-600.
    In this paper I take up the ambivalence we rightly feel toward leaders by examining the relationship between charismatic authority and moral exemplarity. Drawing on the social theory of Max Weber, and in dialogue with a case study of an anti-militarism movement called the SOA (School of Americas) Watch, I demonstrate that through a “politics of sacrifice” leaders synchronize their own stories with those of communally recognized exemplars and act in ways that evidence a solidarity in the suffering of those (...)
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  41. The Gift of Mourning.Harris B. Bechtol - 2023 - Journal of French and Francophone Philosophy 31 (1/2):85-105.
    This paper explores the relationship of mourning and the gift in the work of Jacques Derrida. I argue that mourning is not a Derridean gift, but mourning does open us to the gift. Reading the works of Aristotle, Cicero, and Kierkegaard on friendship and love to the dead in the wake of Derrida’s Politics of Friendship makes this relation among mourning and the gift apparent for he presents mourning as the opening to a democracy to-come (...)
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  42.  25
    Kagwahiv Mourning: Dreams of a Bereaved Father.Waud H. Kracke - 1981 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 9 (4):258-275.
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  43.  1
    Mourning the Future.Günther Anders, Manuela Kölke & Christopher John Müller - 2024 - Journal of Continental Philosophy 5 (1):169-177.
    This is the first English translation of “Die beweinte Zukunft,” a retelling of the story of Noah and the flood by Günther Anders (1902–1992). The German original was written in 1961 and first published in 1962 in the journal Alternative: Zeitschrift für Literatur und Diskussion in a slightly longer version, which also carried a subtitle that translates to “from the Molussian Apocrypha, translated by Günther Anders.” This link to Molussia, a fictious land of Anders’s invention that is frequently evoked in (...)
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  44.  44
    Mourning the Puer Delicatus : Status Inconsistency and the Ethical Value of Fostering in Statius, Silvae 2.1.Neil W. Bernstein - 2005 - American Journal of Philology 126 (2):257-280.
    In Silvae 2.1, Statius laments the premature death of the libertus Glaucias, the alumnus of Atedius Melior. This paper examines Statius' response to the rhetorical difficulties posed by Glaucias' status inconsistency and the ambiguous ethical value of fostering in the literary tradition. By presenting alternative models of status, Silvae 2.1 reflects the increasing social power of freedmen and their descendants. Through its representation of Melior's atypical response to orbitas (most attested adoptive and fostering relationships occurred between individuals of similar status), (...)
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  45.  18
    Mourning Identities: Commemorative and Curricular Debates Concerning the Fall of the World Trade Center.Claudia Eppert - forthcoming - Philosophy of Music Education Review 10 (2):128-132.
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  46. On mourning's end: sacrificial feminine positions and their intolerable revelation before the death of the father.Hada Soria Escalante - 2019 - In Hada Soria Escalante (ed.), Rethinking the relation between women and psychoanalysis: loss, mourning, and the feminine. Lanham: Lexington Books.
  47. Mourning Cry and Woe Oracle, (BZAW).Waldemar Janzen - 1972
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  48.  16
    Where Mourning Takes Them: Migrants, Borders, and an Alternative Reality.David P. Sandell - 2010 - Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 38 (2):179-204.
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  49.  10
    Mourning Marginalized: Totalitarianism and the Shared World.Mikołaj Sławkowski-Rode - 2017 - Synthesis Philosophica 32 (1):67-77.
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  50.  53
    Impossible Mourning: Sophocles Reversed.Fanny Söderbäck - 2011 - Philosophical Topics 39 (2):165-181.
    Focusing on the way in which sexual difference is articulated in Sophocles' Antigone , I offer a reading that reverses the dialectic most commonly ascribed to the play. While most interlocutors of this classic tragedy connect its heroine to divine law and the private realm and see Creon as a representative of human law and politics, I trace what I call a Sophoclean reversal at the core of the play, suggesting that, through a series of negations and contaminations, things are (...)
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