Article published In:
Metaphor and the Social World
Vol. 10:1 (2020) ► pp.4575
References (37)
References
Boss, P. (1999). Ambiguous Loss: Learning to Live with Unresolved Grief. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Brier, N. (2008). Grief Following Miscarriage: A Comprehensive Review of the Literature. Journal of Women’s Health 17(3), 451–464. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Brinkmann, S., & Kofod, E. (2018). Grief as an extended emotion. Culture & Psychology, 24(2), 160–173. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cacciatore, J., DeFrain, J., & Jones, K. L. C. (2008). When a Baby Dies: Ambiguity and Stillbirth. Marriage & Family Review 44(4), 439–454. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cacciatore, J., Blood, C., & Kurker, S. (2018). From “Silent Birth” to Voices Heard: Volunteering, Meaning, and Posttraumatic Growth After Stillbirth. Illness, Crisis & Loss 26(1), 23–39. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Cameron, L. (2003). Metaphor in Educational Discourse. London: Continuum.Google Scholar
Fainsilber, L., & Ortony, A. (1987). Metaphorical uses of language in the expression of emotions. Metaphor and Symbolic Activity 2(4), 239–250. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Folkman, S. F. (2001). Revised coping theory and the process of bereavement. In H. Schut (Ed.), Handbook of bereavement research: consequences, coping, and care. Washington: American Psychological Association, pp. 563–584. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gibbs, R. (1994). The Poetics of Metaphor. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gibbs, R., & Franks, H. (2002). Embodied metaphor in women’s narratives about their experiences with cancer. Health Communication 14(2), 139–165. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Gillies, J., & Neimeyer, R. A. (2006). Loss, Grief, and the Search for Significance: Toward a Model of Meaning Reconstruction in Bereavement. Journal of Constructivist Psychology 19(1), 31–65. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Grady, J. (1997). Foundations of meaning: primary metaphors and primary scenes, Unpublished PhD Thesis, University of California at Berkeley.Google Scholar
Jensen, T. W. (2017). Doing Metaphor: An Ecological Perspective on Metaphoricity in Discourse. In B. Hampe (Ed.), Metaphor: Embodied Cognition and Discourse. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp.257–276. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Jensen, T. W., & Cuffari, E. (2014). Doubleness in experience: toward a distributed enactive approach to metaphoricity. Metaphor and Symbol, 29(4), pp.278–297. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Keefe-Cooperman, K. (2005). A comparison of grief as related to miscarriage and termination for fetal abnormality. OMEGA 50(4), 281–300. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Kersting, A., & Wagner, B. (2012). Complicated grief after perinatal loss. Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience 14(2), 187–194.Google Scholar
Kofod, E., & Brinkmann, S. (2017). Grief as a normative phenomenon: The diffuse and ambivalent normativity of infant loss and parental grieving in contemporary Western culture. Culture & Psychology 23(4), 519–533. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lafarge, C., Mitchell, K., & Fox, P. (2013). Women’s experiences of coping with pregnancy termination for fetal abnormality. Qualitative Health Research 23(7), 924–936. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Lakoff, G. and Johnson, M. (1980). Metaphor we Live By, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Lee, C., & Slade, P. (1996). Miscarriage as a traumatic event: A review of the literature and new implications for intervention. Journal of Psychosomatic Research 40(3), 235–244. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Maguire, M., Light, A., Kuppermann, M., Dalton, V. K., Steinauer, J. E., & Kerns, J. L. (2015). Grief after second-trimester termination for fetal anomaly: a qualitative study. Contraception 911, 234–239. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Malacrida, C. (1998). Mourning the Dreams: How Parents Create Meaning from Miscarriage, Stillbirth & Early Infant Death. Alberta, Canada: Qual Institute Press.Google Scholar
Neimeyer, R. A. (2001). Meaning reconstruction & the experience of loss. American Psychological Association. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Neimeyer, R. A., & Anderson, A. (2002). Meaning reconstruction theory. In N. Thompson & J. Campling (eds.) Loss and Grief. London: Palgrave, pp. 45–64. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Neimeyer, R. A., Baldwin, S. A., & Gillies, J. (2006). Continuing Bonds and Reconstructing Meaning: Mitigating Complications in Bereavement. Death Studies 30(8), 715–738. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
NHS (2014). Improving Quality, [URL]
Noë, A. (2009). Out of our heads: Why you are not your brain and other lessons from the biology of consciousness. New York: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Parkes, C. M. (1996). Bereavement: Studies of grief in adult life (3rd ed.) London: Routledge.Google Scholar
PRAGGLEJAZ Group. (2007). MIP: A method for identifying metaphorically used words in discourse. Metaphor and Symbol 22(1), 1–39. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Rando, T. A. (1991). Parental adjustment to the loss of a child. In D. Papadatou & C. Papadatos (Eds.), Children and Death. New York: Hemisphere Publishing, pp. 233–253.Google Scholar
(1993). Treatment of Complicated Mourning. Champaign, Illinois: Research Press.Google Scholar
Renner, C. H., Verdekal, S., Brier, S., & Fallucca, G. (2000). The Meaning of Miscarriage to Others: Is it an Unrecognised Loss? Journal of Personal and Interpersonal Loss 51, 65–76. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Riches, G., & Dawson, P. (1996). Communities of feeling: The culture of bereaved parents. Mortality 11, 143–162. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Semino, E. (2011). Metaphor, creativity, and the experience of pain across genres. In J. Swann, R. Carter and R. Pope (Eds.), Creativity, Language, Literature: The State of the Art. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 83–102. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Uren, T. H., & Wastell, C. A. (2002). Attachment and meaning-making in perinatal bereavement. Death Studies 26(4), 279–308. DOI logoGoogle Scholar
Walker, J. L. G., & Walker, B. M. (2015). Unscripted Loss: A Hesitant Narrative of a Reconstructed Family. In R. E. Silverman & J. Baglia (Eds.), Communicating Pregnancy Loss: Narrative as a Method for Change. New York: Peter Lang, pp. 59–71.Google Scholar
Williams-Whitney, D., Mio, J. S., & Whitney, P. (1992). Metaphor production in creative writing. Journal of Psycholinguistic Research 21(6), 497–509.Google Scholar
Cited by (22)

Cited by 22 other publications

Malvini Redden, Shawna & Jennifer A. Scarduzio
2024. Mysteries, Battles, and Games: Exploring Agency in Metaphors About Sexual Harassment. Management Communication Quarterly 38:1  pp. 117 ff. DOI logo
Qiu, Amy Han, Dennis Tay & Bernadette Watson
2024. Metaphorical language and psychopathological symptoms: a case study of trauma victims’ metaphor use. BMC Psychology 12:1 DOI logo
Tay, Dennis & Han Qiu
2024. Source Domain Associations as Conceptual Assemblages in Trauma Talk – an Association Rule Mining Approach. Metaphor and Symbol 39:2  pp. 96 ff. DOI logo
Turnbull, Margo, Amy Han Qiu, Alexandra Sanderson & Bernadette Watson
2024. Liminal spaces and Hong Kong: Metaphors of crisis and identity. Emotion, Space and Society 52  pp. 101017 ff. DOI logo
Wallis, Emma L.G., Jennifer Heath & Amanda Spong
2024. How do people story their experience of miscarriage? A systematic review of qualitative literature. Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare 41  pp. 100997 ff. DOI logo
Deng, Yu, Luxue Xie, Li Wang & Yaokai Chen
2023. Psychoanalysis of COVID-19 Patient Narratives: A Descriptive Study. Medicina 59:4  pp. 712 ff. DOI logo
Di Biase-Dyson, Camilla
2023. The semantics of a parallel reality. Metaphor and the Social World 13:1  pp. 81 ff. DOI logo
Oerlemans, Anke J.M., Aletta G. Dorst, Marjan L. Knippenberg & Gert J. Olthuis
2023. Dementia in metaphors: A qualitative study among informal caregivers of people with dementia from migrant and ethnic minority groups. SSM - Qualitative Research in Health 3  pp. 100266 ff. DOI logo
Turner, Sarah & Jeannette Littlemore
2023. Literal or metaphorical? Conventional or creative?. Metaphor and the Social World 13:1  pp. 37 ff. DOI logo
Turner, Sarah & Jeannette Littlemore
2023. The Many Faces of Creativity, DOI logo
Wilding, Ell, Sara Bartl, Jeannette Littlemore, Maria Clark & Joanne Brooke
2023. A metaphor analysis of older adults' lived experience of household isolation during COVID-19. Frontiers in Communication 7 DOI logo
Deng, Yu, Jixue Yang, Li Wang & Yaokai Chen
2022. The Road Less Traveled: How COVID-19 Patients Use Metaphors to Frame Their Lived Experiences. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19:23  pp. 15979 ff. DOI logo
Dyrmo, Tomasz
2022. Do we need Queer Cognitive Linguistics?. tekst i dyskurs - text und diskurs :16 (2022)  pp. 241 ff. DOI logo
Mannoni, Michele
2022. 冤Yuan! Conceptual metaphors for INJUSTICE in Chinese. Asiatische Studien - Études Asiatiques 76:4  pp. 711 ff. DOI logo
Qiu, Han, Bernadette Watson & Dennis Tay
2022. Metaphors and trauma: An image schematic analysis of symptom-specific metaphors. Lingua 271  pp. 103244 ff. DOI logo
Deng, Yu, Jixue Yang, Wan Wan & Sanjay Kumar Singh Patel
2021. Embodied metaphor in communication about lived experiences of the COVID-19 pandemic in Wuhan, China. PLOS ONE 16:12  pp. e0261968 ff. DOI logo
Lancaster, Mason D.
2021. Metaphor Research and the Hebrew Bible. Currents in Biblical Research 19:3  pp. 235 ff. DOI logo
Norwood, Tamarin & John Boulton
2021. Reconciling the Uniquely Embodied Grief of Perinatal Death: A Narrative Approach. Religions 12:11  pp. 976 ff. DOI logo
Turner, Sarah
2021. Multimodality. In Analysing Religious Discourse,  pp. 70 ff. DOI logo
Kuberska, Karolina, Danielle Fuller, Jeannette Littlemore, Sheelagh McGuinness & Sarah Turner
2020. Death Before Birth: Liminal Bodies and Legal Frameworks. In A Jurisprudence of the Body [Palgrave Socio-Legal Studies, ],  pp. 149 ff. DOI logo
Tovey, Rob & Sarah Turner
2020. Stillbirth memento photography. Journal of Visual Communication in Medicine 43:1  pp. 2 ff. DOI logo
M Zarei Salehabadi, M Kheirkhah, N Esmaeili & SH Haghani
2020. Effects of Empowerment on the Attitudes toward Fertility and Childbearing in Women with Failed Pregnancies: A Clinical Trial. Iran Journal of Nursing 33:125  pp. 55 ff. DOI logo

This list is based on CrossRef data as of 5 july 2024. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.