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Our babies[’] count[er story]: A narrative ethnography of a baby loss remembrance walk ritual
Communication Monographs ( IF 2.695 ) Pub Date : 2019-09-24 , DOI: 10.1080/03637751.2019.1666289
Erin K. Willer 1 , Emily Krebs 2 , Nivea Castaneda 3 , Kate Drazner Hoyt 4 , Veronica A. Droser 5 , Jessica A. Johnson 6 , Jeni Hunniecutt 7
Affiliation  

ABSTRACT The non-profit organization Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep (NILMDTS) hosts annual remembrance walks that gather bereaved families to honor babies who have died. Grounded in narrative theory and research on family communication rituals, the present study focused on understanding how the NILMDTS Remembrance Walk counternarrates the experience of baby loss vis-à-vis the master narrative that silences it. Our narrative ethnography included participating alongside approximately 1375–1600 bereaved family members, respectively, in the 2014 and 2015 Remembrance Walks taking place in Littleton, Colorado. Two interwoven counternarratives resisted the master narrative. The communal loss narrative centered community-building for families and the individual loss narrative emphasized the unique identities of babies, as well as their individual family units and members.

中文翻译:

我们的婴儿 ['] 计数 [er 故事]:婴儿失去纪念步行仪式的叙事民族志

摘要 非营利组织 Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep (NILMDTS) 举办年度纪念步行活动,聚集失去亲人的家庭以纪念死去的婴儿。本研究以叙事理论和对家庭交流仪式的研究为基础,重点是了解 NILMDTS 纪念步行如何相对于沉默它的主叙事来反叙述婴儿丢失的经历。我们的叙事民族志包括分别与大约 1375-1600 名失去亲人的家庭成员一起参加 2014 年和 2015 年在科罗拉多州利特尔顿举行的纪念步行。两种交织的反叙事抵制了主叙事。以家庭社区建设为中心的公共损失叙事和个人损失叙事强调婴儿的独特身份,
更新日期:2019-09-24
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