Are we a ‘death-denying’ society? A sociological review
References (56)
The Denial of Death
(1973)The reversal of death: changes in attitudes toward death in western societies
Limits to Medicine
(1976)- et al.
The American View of Death: Acceptance or Denial?
(1972) Thoughts for the times on war and death
The Meaning of Death
(1959)- et al.
The unspeakable subject of death
On Dying and Denying: A Psychiatric Study of Terminality
(1972)- et al.
The Psychology of Death
(1972) Nursing the dying: implications of Kubler-Ross staging theory
Denying death: a note regarding some ambiguities in the current discussion
Omega
(1972)
Denial of death in close encounters
Omega
(1979)
Death consciousness and social consciousness—a critique of Ernest Becker and Jacques Choron on denying death
Omega
(1980)
The dying role: its relevance to improved patient care
Psychiatry
(1977)
Social functions of denial of death
Omega
(1981)
Death in American society—a brief working paper
Am. Behav. Scient.
(1963)
The pornography of death
The concept of death
The Rules of Sociological Method
(1964)
Sex and Repression in a Savage Society
(1960)
Experimental and correlational studies of the fear of death
Psychol. Bull.
(1967)
Death customs
Death and bereavement
Sociology of Death
(1970)
The Romeo Error
(1974)
Child's view of death
Old women and identity maintenance: outwitting the grim reaper
Cited by (131)
The words we die by
2024, Social Science and Medicine“Cured” but not “healed”: The application of principles of palliative care to cancer survivorship
2021, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :This is largely owing to Western society's desire to postpone mortality through a myopic denial of its inevitability (Becker, 1973). The “denial of death thesis” has been proposed to characterize the pervasive death denying and defying attitudes and perceptions in Western culture (Kellehear, 1984; Seale, 1998). First advanced in the period between 1955 and 1985, sociological, psychological, and clinical literature posited that an atmosphere of death denial was created due to prevailing perspectives that death should be regarded as a taboo topic of discussion (Zimmermann and Rodin, 2004).
Contemplating the Impacts of Canadian Healthcare Institutions That Refuse to Provide Medical Assistance in Dying: A Framework-Based Discussion of Potential Health Access Implications
2023, American Journal of Hospice and Palliative MedicineEUPHEMISING AGEING IN POPULAR AND ACADEMIC PUBLICATIONS ON THE LIFE COURSE: AN EXPLORATORY STUDY
2023, Roczniki HumanistyczneThe Reflection Room<sup>®</sup>: Moving from Death-Avoiding to Death-Discussing
2023, Omega (United States)Death, Spirituality, and Digital Afterlife
2023, The Handbook on Religion and Communication
Copyright © 1984 Published by Elsevier Ltd.