Kondo-Arita Megumi, Becker Carl B
President's Office, Global Center of Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Takatsuki, Japan.
Policy Science Unit, School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
Omega (Westport). 2023 Feb 21:302228231158914. doi: 10.1177/00302228231158914.
Bereavement is an extremely personal feeling, but Japanese society tends to disapprove of displays of negative personal emotion or weakness. For ages, mourning rituals like funerals provided an exception where social permission was given to sharing grief and seeking support. However, the form and significance of Japanese funerals have changed rapidly over the past generation, and especially since the advent of COVID-19 restrictions on assembly and travel. This paper overviews the trajectory of changes and continuities in mourning rituals in Japan, looking at their psychological and social impacts. It goes on to summarize recent Japanese research showing that appropriate funerals are not merely of psychological and social benefit, but may have an important role in reducing or supporting grief that might otherwise require medical and social work intervention.
丧亲之痛是一种极其个人化的感受,但日本社会往往不赞成表现出负面的个人情绪或软弱。长久以来,葬礼等哀悼仪式是个例外,在这种情况下,社会允许人们分享悲伤并寻求支持。然而,在过去一代人的时间里,尤其是自新冠疫情对集会和旅行实施限制以来,日本葬礼的形式和意义发生了迅速变化。本文概述了日本哀悼仪式的变化轨迹和延续性,并探讨了它们的心理和社会影响。接着,文章总结了日本最近的研究,这些研究表明,适当的葬礼不仅具有心理和社会效益,而且在减轻或支持悲伤方面可能发挥重要作用,否则这些悲伤可能需要医疗和社会工作的干预。