The Lingering Impact of COVID-19 on Grief and Bereavement, Practices Among College Students in the Pacific Northwest

Research Mentor(s)

Judith Pine

Description

This research aims to examine the effects of COVID-19 on grief, bereavement, and funerary/mourning rituals among Western Washington University college students. Through a queer feminist death studies theoretical lens, an autoethnographic approach with individual and focus group interviews, alongside historical background research, aims to examine the relationship between COVID-19, and changes to grief, bereavement, and funerary ritual behavior.

Document Type

Event

Start Date

May 2022

End Date

May 2022

Location

Carver Gym (Bellingham, Wash.)

Department

CHSS - Anthropology

Genre/Form

student projects; posters

Type

Image

Rights

Copying of this document in whole or in part is allowable only for scholarly purposes. It is understood, however, that any copying or publication of this document for commercial purposes, or for financial gain, shall not be allowed without the author’s written permission.

Language

English

Format

application/pdf

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May 18th, 9:00 AM May 18th, 5:00 PM

The Lingering Impact of COVID-19 on Grief and Bereavement, Practices Among College Students in the Pacific Northwest

Carver Gym (Bellingham, Wash.)

This research aims to examine the effects of COVID-19 on grief, bereavement, and funerary/mourning rituals among Western Washington University college students. Through a queer feminist death studies theoretical lens, an autoethnographic approach with individual and focus group interviews, alongside historical background research, aims to examine the relationship between COVID-19, and changes to grief, bereavement, and funerary ritual behavior.