학술논문

Perceiving those who are gone: Cultural research on post-bereavement perception or hallucination of the deceased.
Document Type
Article
Source
Transcultural Psychiatry. Dec2023, Vol. 60 Issue 6, p879-890. 12p.
Subject
*DEATH & psychology
*CULTURE
*HALLUCINATIONS
*GRIEF
*CRYING
*HUMANITY
*FAMILY attitudes
*INTELLECT
*ETHNOLOGY
*PARTICIPANT observation
*PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation
*BEREAVEMENT
*PSYCHOTHERAPY
Language
ISSN
1363-4615
Abstract
Experiencing the continued presence of the deceased is common among the bereaved, whether as a sensory perception or as a felt presence. This phenomenon has been researched from psychological and psychiatric perspectives during the last five decades. Such experiences have been also documented in the ethnographic literature but, despite the extensive cross-cultural research in the area, anthropological data has generally not been considered in the psychological literature about this phenomenon. This paper provides an overview aimed at bridging these two areas of knowledge, and approaches the post-bereavement perception or hallucination of the deceased in cultural context. Ongoing debates are addressed from the vantage point of ethnographic and clinical case study research focusing on the cultural repertoires (in constant flux as cultures change) from which these experiences are labelled as desirable and normal, on the one hand, or as dangerous and pathological, on the other. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]