Search

Your search keyword '"Ribbens Mccarthy, Jane"' showing total 38 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Ribbens Mccarthy, Jane" Remove constraint Author: "Ribbens Mccarthy, Jane" Database OAIster Remove constraint Database: OAIster
38 results on '"Ribbens Mccarthy, Jane"'

Search Results

1. Unpacking ‘family troubles’, care and relationality across time and space

2. Life choices : university-educated mothers in a Japanese suburb

3. Do we need to decolonise bereavement studies?

4. Troubled talk and talk about troubles: moral cultures of infant feeding in professional, policy and parenting discourses

5. Diversity challenges from urban West Africa: How Senegalese family deaths illuminate dominant understandings of ‘bereavement’

6. Troubling families: introduction

7. Childhood, children and family lives in China

8. The Institutionalisation of ‘TongNian’ and ‘childhood’ in China and Britain: Exploring Cautious Comparisons

9. Producing emotionally sensed knowledge? Reflexivity and emotions in researching responses to death

10. Interpreting ‘grief’ in Senegal: language, emotions and cross-cultural translation in a francophone African context

11. Responses to Death, Care and Family Relations in Urban Senegal

12. The politics of concepts: family and its (putative) replacements

13. The powerful relational language of ‘family’: togetherness, belonging and personhood

14. Key Concepts in Family Studies

15. Embodied relationality and caring after death

16. 'They all look as if they're coping, but I'm not': the relational power/lessness of 'youth' in responding to experiences of bereavement

17. Troubling children's families: who's troubled and why? Approaches to inter-cultural dialogue

18. Caring after death: issues of embodiment and relationality

19. Troubling families: introduction

20. Childhood, children and family lives in China

21. Troubling children's families: who's troubled and why? Approaches to inter-cultural dialogue

22. Responses to Death, Care and Family Relations in Urban Senegal

23. Producing emotionally sensed knowledge? Reflexivity and emotions in researching responses to death

24. Interpreting ‘grief’ in Senegal: language, emotions and cross-cultural translation in a francophone African context

25. The Institutionalisation of ‘TongNian’ and ‘childhood’ in China and Britain: Exploring Cautious Comparisons

26. Embodied relationality and caring after death

27. The politics of concepts: family and its (putative) replacements

28. Caring after death: issues of embodiment and relationality

29. The powerful relational language of ‘family’: togetherness, belonging and personhood

30. Troubled talk and talk about troubles: moral cultures of infant feeding in professional, policy and parenting discourses

31. Key Concepts in Family Studies

32. 'They all look as if they're coping, but I'm not': the relational power/lessness of 'youth' in responding to experiences of bereavement

33. The (cross-cultural) problem of categories: who is ‘child’, what is ‘family’?

34. The aftermath of death in the continuing lives of the living: extending ‘bereavement’ paradigms through family and relational perspectives

35. Time-space practices of care after a family death in urban Senegal

36. Do we need to decolonise bereavement studies?

37. Diversity challenges from urban West Africa: How Senegalese family deaths illuminate dominant understandings of ‘bereavement’

38. “Family Troubles” and “Troubling Families”: Opening Up Fertile Ground

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources