Introduction
Grief can be a challenging experience that catalyses a diverse array of social processes and practices (Jacobs & Prigerson, 2000; Ritchie, 2003). While there has been scholarly attention paid to grief and the linkages to health and illness, gender analyses are conspicuously absent and, in particular, studies examining connections between masculinities and grief among young men. Instead much of the literature has focussed on describing gender differences between men and women. When Western men grieve inways that invoke stoicism, anger and rationality, it has often been explained as flowing from socially sanctioned masculine ideals
IntroductionGrief can be a challenging experience that catalyses a diverse array of social processes and practices (Jacobs & Prigerson, 2000; Ritchie, 2003). While there has been scholarly attention paid to grief and the linkages to health and illness, gender analyses are conspicuously absent and, in particular, studies examining connections between masculinities and grief among young men. Instead much of the literature has focussed on describing gender differences between men and women. When Western men grieve inways that invoke stoicism, anger and rationality, it has often been explained as flowing from socially sanctioned masculine ideals
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