Death and Ethnicity: A Psychocultural StudyEthel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center, University of Southern California, 1976 - 224 páginas |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 16
Página 127
... subcultures would permit children under ten years of age to visit them on their deathbed , it was the familistically - oriented Japanese Americans and Mexican Americans who most often specified that if the children were their own ...
... subcultures would permit children under ten years of age to visit them on their deathbed , it was the familistically - oriented Japanese Americans and Mexican Americans who most often specified that if the children were their own ...
Página 142
... subcultures ) there are even special provisions for the afterlife of children . In the Mexican American folk subculture the souls of dead children become little saints or angels . According to the folk - Buddhism of at least some Los ...
... subcultures ) there are even special provisions for the afterlife of children . In the Mexican American folk subculture the souls of dead children become little saints or angels . According to the folk - Buddhism of at least some Los ...
Página 149
... subculture because of the wide range of group representatives obliged to attend and because the koden gift offering brought by those attending makes larger funerals economically feasible . We were reminded of the obituary of a prominent ...
... subculture because of the wide range of group representatives obliged to attend and because the koden gift offering brought by those attending makes larger funerals economically feasible . We were reminded of the obituary of a prominent ...
Contenido
Preface | 1 |
The Survey and the Sample | 9 |
An Overview of Death and Ethnicity | 25 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Death and Ethnicity: A Psychocultural Study Richard A. Kalish,David K. Reynolds Vista de fragmentos - 1976 |
Death and Ethnicity: A Psychocultural Study Richard A. Kalish,David K. Reynolds Vista de fragmentos - 1976 |
Términos y frases comunes
acceptance afterlife age groups Angeles Anglo Americans asked attended attitudes behavior believe bereavement Black Americans body Buddhist burial casket Catholic cemetery ceremony chi square tests church compared concern correlation cremation culture dead death and dying death-related deceased devout died discussed dying person elderly emotional ethnic groups expected experience expression familistic family members fear of death feelings felt fewer frequently friends funeral director funeral service grave gravesite grief half homicide important individual interview Issei Japanese American community Japanese language Kalish koden least less live Los Angeles County Male Female Memorial Day Mexican American respondents middle-aged mourning Nisei older persons one's pain participate patients perhaps physician preferred Question/Response questions relationship relatively religious rituals role Sansei selected sense significantly social social class someone spouse subcultures suicide survey told tragic trend wish woman women young