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From Child to Elder

Personal Transformation in Becoming an Orphan at Midlife

by Alan Pope (Author)
©2006 Monographs XVIII, 278 Pages
Series: American University Studies , Volume 24

Summary

From Child to Elder explores the personal growth that can arise when a middle-aged adult loses his or her last living parent. Based on an empirical phenomenological study, this book details the complex ways in which the adult orphan’s ongoing relationship to the deceased parents, combined with the unique meanings of the loss, leads to a deepening of individual autonomy and spiritual awakening. Confrontation with mortality and fundamental aloneness promotes, among other things, an increased sense of existential responsibility toward self and others as the adult orphan psychologically assumes its new role as an elder. These and many other themes are structured into an integrated whole and amplified through developmental, existential, and Jungian perspectives. The result is a compelling portrait of the processes by which the death of one’s parents can accelerate psychospiritual development.

Details

Pages
XVIII, 278
Year
2006
ISBN (Hardcover)
9780820479415
Language
English
Keywords
Eltern Tod Erwachsenes Kind Trauerarbeit Bereavement Midlife Grief Personal Transformation Adult Development
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, Oxford, Wien, 2006. XVIII, 278 pp.

Biographical notes

Alan Pope (Author)

The Author: Alan Pope is Assistant Professor of Psychology and a member of the graduate faculty at the University of West Georgia. He received his Ph.D. in clinical existential-phenomenological psychology at Duquesne University in Pennsylvania following advanced graduate studies in computer science and artificial intelligence. His research generally aims to elucidate the processes of psychospiritual transformation resulting from involuntary suffering and from disciplined spiritual and creative practice.

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Title: From Child to Elder