Memoir aims to encourage discussion on dying, bereavement
Memoir aims to encourage discussion about dying and
bereavement
Press
The author of a
moving memoir of a mother losing her young adult daughter to
cancer hopes her writing will generate discussion in this
country about our “death-denying culture” and the way
people react to the bereaved.
Sing No Sad Songs: Losing a daughter to cancer is a heartbreaking yet beautifully composed memoir by North Canterbury writer Sandra Arnold, which will be launched this month by Canterbury University Press.
Dr Arnold wrote Sing No
Sad Songs for her PhD in Creative Writing from Central
Queensland University. After the death of her 23-year-old
daughter Rebecca from a rare appendix cancer nine years ago
she found there was very little information about the
emotional, physical, mental and spiritual effects of
grieving the death of a young adult child from
cancer.
“Part of the reason for this is that cancer in
the 18 to 25-year-old age group is very rare. Because of the
lack of information I decided to help fill the gap by
writing my PhD thesis on the topic. My thesis comprises a
memoir of my own experience of parental bereavement and an
exegesis on psychological and sociological theories of
grief, how grief is dealt with in Western societies, the
language of grief and how narrative can be used as a tool to
help the bereaved.”
Dr Arnold said her aim was always to have the memoir part of her thesis published as a book so that it would be accessible to others outside academia, as a way for other bereaved parents to recognise and give voice to their own stories, and for the non-bereaved to gain an understanding of what it feels like to be in the skin of a bereaved parent.
“The non-bereaved sometimes have difficulty in empathising with bereaved parents. In Western societies language often fails when talking to the bereaved and euphemisms, platitudes and clichés are used to express condolence because many people do not know what to say.”
Dr Arnold says when doing research for the exegesis component of her thesis she came to the conclusion that post World War II New Zealand had become a “death denying society”. Searching through obituary pages in newspapers she failed to turn up one reference of someone having “died”, but many euphemisms such as “passed away” and “laid to rest”.
Dr Arnold says people sometimes avoid talking to bereaved parents not only because they don’t know what to say, but because in contemporary Western society the death of a child is too painful to contemplate. Healthcare professionals, used to so much death, sometimes lack sensitivity in dealing with the bereaved. She describes both situations in her book from her own personal experience.
“Because emotional injury,
unlike physical injury, is largely invisible, society
expects bereaved parents to return to ‘normal’ in an
unrealistic time frame. Sing No Sad Songs suggests
that although bereaved parents never ‘get over’ the
death of their child it is possible to learn to live with
the pain and also to live a full and productive life again.
Sing No Sad Songs will be launched this
evening by one of New Zealand’s leading writers, Fiona
Farrell, at Okeover House at the University of Canterbury.
Ms Farrell wrote the foreword for Sing No Sad Songs and describes it as “a brave and wonderful book about death, pain and love”.
The exegesis that
accompanies the memoir is published online on the Canterbury
University Press website: www.cup.canterbury.ac.nz.
• Sing No Sad Songs, by Sandra
Arnold, published by Canterbury University Press, June 2011,
RRP NZ$35, Paperback, 256pp. ISBN 978-1-927145-06-7.
About the author:
Sandra Arnold lives in North Canterbury with
her husband, four alpacas and a dog and teaches at
Christchurch Polytechnic Institute of Technology. She has a
MLitt and PhD in Creative Writing (Central Queensland
University) and is the author of two novels. Her short
fiction has been broadcast on Radio New Zealand and widely
published and anthologised in New Zealand and overseas.
ENDS