Authors
Linda Waimarie Nikora, Bridgette Masters‐Awatere, Ngahuia Te Awekotuku
Publication date
2012/9
Journal
Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology
Volume
22
Issue
5
Pages
400-413
Publisher
John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
Description
Death is a universal event. It will happen to all of us, yet how we respond to death is particular and influenced by our cultural worlds. This study offers an investigation of the idiographic, of how one woman responded to, and made arrangements to, mourn and bury her mother. Specifically, we explore how she and her whanau (family) under pressure of time and grief and in the absence of clear final wishes met to consider issues and make decisions about the situation they were confronted with. This case forms part of a much larger programme of research into Maori death rituals, change and adaption. Informing a scholarly audience unfamiliar with the Maori world requires a significant amount of contextual information. The case study is a powerful strategy to achieve this and one that draws readers into deep understanding (Willig, 2008). This case provides insight into the struggles of an indigenous fourth‐world …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
LW Nikora, B Masters‐Awatere, NT Awekotuku - Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology, 2012