Art embodied: tattoos as memorials

Authors

  • Deborah Davidson

References

Benore ER, Park CL (2004). Death-specific religious beliefs and bereavement: belief in an afterlife and continued attachment. International Journal for the Psychology of Religion 14(1) 1–22.

Bonanno GA, Kaltman S (1999). Toward an integrative perspective on bereavement. Psychological Bulletin 125(6) 760.

Bowlby J (1979). The making and breaking of affectional bonds. London: Tavistock.

Currier JM, Holland J, Neimeyer RA (2006). Sense making, grief and the experience of violent loss: toward a mediational model. Death Studies 30 403–428.

Davidson D (2007). The emergence of hospital protocols for perinatal loss, 1950–2000. Dissertation. Toronto: York University. Available from: https://play.google.com/store/books/details/The_Emergence_of_Hospital_Protocols_for_Perinatal?id=9iDTJHucXLQC

Davidson D (2008). A technology of care: caregiver response to perinatal loss. Women’s studies international forum, special edition, women and technologies of reproduction 31(4) 278–284.

Davidson D (2010a). Memorial Tattoo Interviews. Ontario, Canada.

Davidson D (2010b). Grief, child loss. In: Andrea O’Reilly (ed). Encyclopedia of motherhood. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 467–470.

Davidson D (2011). Memorial Tattoo Focus Groups. Toronto, Canada.

Davidson D (2016). Introducing The Tattoo Project. In: D Davidson (ed). The Tattoo Project: commemorative tattoos, visual culture, and the digital archive 1–17. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press.

Davidson D, Letherby G (2015). Editorial introduction special edition: loss, bereavement, and creativity. Illness, Crisis & Loss 23(4) 298–290.

Davidson D, Duhig A (2016). Visual research methods: memorial tattoos as memory-realization. In: D Davidson (ed). The Tattoo Project: commemorative tattoos, visual culture, and the digital archive, 63–75. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press.

Davidson D, Letherby G (2014). Griefwork online: perinatal loss, lifecourse disruption and online support. Human Fertility 3 214–217.

Davidson D, Stahls H (2010). Maternal grief: creating an environment for dialogue. Journal of the Motherhood Initiative for Research and Community Involvement 1(2) 16–25.

Davis CG, Nolen-Hoeksema S (2001). Loss and meaning: how do people make sense of loss? The American Behavioral Scientist 44(5) 726–741.

English Oxford Living Dictionary. (2017). Art. Available from: https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/art. Accessed [15 January 2017].

Field NP, Packman W, Ronen R, Pries A, Davies B, Kramer R (2013). Type of continuing bonds expression and its comforting versus distressing nature: implications for adjustment among bereaved mothers. Death Studies 37(10) 889–912.

Field NP, Gao B, Paderna L (2005). Continuing bonds in bereavement: an attachment theory based perspective. Death Studies 29(4) 277–299.

Katz J (2001). Introduction. In: JL Hockey, J Katz, N Small (eds). Grief, mourning and death ritual. Buckingham: Open University Press, 1–15.

Kitzmann A (2016). Between the inside and the outside: commemorative tattoos and the externalization of loss or trauma. In: D Davidson (ed). The Tattoo Project: commemorative tattoos, visual culture, and the digital archive 39–47. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press.

Klass D, Silverman PR, Nickman SL (1996). Continuing bonds: new understandings of grief. Philadelphia, PA: Taylor & Francis.

Klass D (1993). Solace and immortality: bereaved parents’ continuing bond with their children. Death Studies 17(4) 343–368.

Letherby G, Davidson D (2015). Embodied storytelling: loss and bereavement, creative practices, and support. Illness, Crisis & Loss 23(4) 343–360.

Martel S (2016). Commemorative tattoos as visual-material media. In: D Davidson (ed). The Tattoo Project: commemorative tattoos, visual culture, and the digital archive 31–38. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press.

Neimeyer RA (2000). Searching for the meaning of meaning: grief therapy and the process of reconstruction. Death Studies 24(6) 541–558.

Packman W, Horsley H, Davies B, Kramer R (2006). Sibling bereavement and continuing bonds. Death Studies 30 817–841.

Regehr C, Sussman T (2004). Intersections between grief and trauma: toward an empirically based model for treating traumatic grief. Brief Treatment and Crisis Intervention 4(3) 289.

Tedeschi RG, Calhoun LG (2006). Expert companions: posttraumatic growth in clinical practice. In: LG Calhoun, RG Tedeschi (eds). Handbook of posttraumatic growth: research and practice. Mahwah, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 291–310.

Weber S (2008). Using visual images in research. In: G Knowles, AL Cole (eds). Handbook of the arts in qualitative research: perspectives, methodologies, examples, and issues. London: Sage, 1–18.

Downloads

Published

2017-01-02

Issue

Section

Other