2008
DOI: 10.2190/om.57.2.c
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Personifications of Personal and Typical Death as Related to Death Attitudes

Abstract: The present article examined differences in personifications of personal and typical death as a function of attitudes about death. Ninety-eight students enrolled in psychology classes were randomly assigned to personify death as a character in a movie depicting either their own deathbed scene or the deathbed scene of the typical person prior to completing the Death Attitude Profile-Revised. The results supported the conceptual distinction between attitudes about personal death and death in general. Participant… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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References 9 publications
(10 reference statements)
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“…Men and women did not differ in their fear of death or neutral acceptance, but men reported more death avoidance than did women, and women reported more escape acceptance and approach acceptance than did men. Bassett, McCann, and Cate (2008) also found that women scored higher than men on death avoidance and approach acceptance.…”
Section: The Multifaceted Nature Of Death Attitudesmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Men and women did not differ in their fear of death or neutral acceptance, but men reported more death avoidance than did women, and women reported more escape acceptance and approach acceptance than did men. Bassett, McCann, and Cate (2008) also found that women scored higher than men on death avoidance and approach acceptance.…”
Section: The Multifaceted Nature Of Death Attitudesmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…Death acceptance can be neutral (stoic recognition of the inevitability of death), approach (positive event, such as a path to a better existence), or escape (release from life hardship; Bassett, McCann, & Cate, 2008;Wong, Reker, & Gesser, 1994). Neutral acceptance is frequently evidenced in war films in which soldiers stand firm and persist in the fight despite an often inevitable death.…”
Section: Death Attitudes: Research and Perspectivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Even the teachers who received some training in loss and bereavement some time ago were not able to assist the bereaved students adequately (Tracey & Holland, 2008). Consequently, the need for additional teacher preparation in dealing with bereaved students is inevitable (Bassett, McCann, & Cate, 2008;Ng, 2009;Reid & Dixon, 1999).…”
Section: Managing and Teaching About Life And Death Issuesmentioning
confidence: 99%