5 research outputs found

    Development in Crisis: Adolescent Sibling Bereavement

    Get PDF
    The death of a sibling represents a major crisis in the life of an adolescent. Instead of exploring the new intellectual, emotional, and psychological components of their identities, teens who lose a sibling often become isolated. Peer groups who were once helpful in providing crucial support and refuge from parental norms may become difficult for teens to relate to, while parents may become so engaged in their own grief they may be unable to provide the surviving adolescent sibling with guidance. Modern research suggests that bereavement is a lifelong process, yet at the very time an adolescent ideally is determining who he is, the death of a sibling threatens the developmental progression for many such youth. Despite the profundity of this dilemma, there is insufficient research that addresses the impact of adolescent sibling bereavement on identity development. In fact, Balmer (1992) has argued that “a conceptual model of adolescent sibling bereavement does not exist” (p. 4). This dissertation explores the symptomatology of adolescent bereavement and its impact on adolescent identity development. This author will utilize the literature to provide a conceptual description of adolescent coping styles during sibling bereavement with an acknowledgement of both pathological and resilient responses and their impact on identity formation. Implications for social work practice, research and knowledge-building will be provided

    The Human Affectome

    Get PDF
    Over the last decades, the interdisciplinary field of the affective sciences has seen proliferation rather than integration of theoretical perspectives. This is due to differences in metaphysical and mechanistic assumptions about human affective phenomena (what they are and how they work) which, shaped by academic motivations and values, have determined the affective constructs and operationalizations. An assumption on the purpose of affective phenomena can be used as a teleological principle to guide the construction of a common set of metaphysical and mechanistic assumptions-a framework for human affective research. In this capstone paper for the special issue "Towards an Integrated Understanding of the Human Affectome", we gather the tiered purpose of human affective phenomena to synthesize assumptions that account for human affective phenomena collectively. This teleologically-grounded framework offers a principled agenda and launchpad for both organizing existing perspectives and generating new ones. Ultimately, we hope Human Affectome brings us a step closer to not only an integrated understanding of human affective phenomena, but an integrated field for affective research
    corecore