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Toward an Anatomy of Mourning: Discipline, Devotion and Liberation in a Freudian-Buddhist Framework

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Abstract

In this essay I first articulate what I take to be an influential and for the most part persuasive model in the western psychoanalytic tradition that is a response to tragic loss, namely, the one that we find in Freud’s little essay entitled ‘Mourning and Melancholia’ (1917). I then use a well-known Buddhist folk tale about the plight of a young woman named Kisagotami to underscore central elements from Buddhist psychology on the subject of suffering that is a consequence of the loss of a young mother’s only child. Fortified by both traditions, I gather together the ingredients for a cross-cultural mental model that serves to explain and to justify as healthy a specific kind of response to a specific form of suffering, namely, the loss of ones’ loved one. I arrive at this model by asking a number of specific questions of both traditions. For instance, what constitutes a non-pathological response to this kind of suffering? What state of mind represents the cessation of such suffering? Is preoccupation with the dead beloved a way of escaping the fact that the person is dead? Is this a form of ignorance that needs to be removed? Is it a form of moral deficiency? Might certain forms and contexts of ignorance, in effect, put one on a path to enlightenment?

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Notes

  1. In Freud’s words, the object is ‘clung to through the medium of a hallucinatory wish-psychosis.’ (p. 166)

  2. If a person does not reach this stage in the mourning process, continuing to be connected to the beloved in the manner described without succumbing to the test of reality, then what is normal has turned pathological. There is no specification of a time frame by Freud for the mourning process, after which it would be deemed pathological.

  3. Dhammapada 114, Book 8, Story 13 (Burlingame 1969.)

  4. It is crucial to point out that Kisagotami’s verses of liberation in the Therigatha embody the very palpable sufferings that were particular to women at that time, such as the death of children and being co-wives.

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Correspondence to Nalini Bhushan.

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A much earlier version of this paper was read at the Vedanta conference at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, in September 2002. A sketch of the current version, which includes the analysis of the tale of Kisagotami, was presented at the Trans-Buddhism seminar at Smith College in April 2004. Thanks to Peter Gregory and Richard Millington for their useful comments on that sketch. Finally, thanks to Jennifer Nery, Cynthia Townley and Jay Garfield for their thoughtful comments on a more detailed recent version, and to Abraham Zablocki for some useful references.

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Bhushan, N. Toward an Anatomy of Mourning: Discipline, Devotion and Liberation in a Freudian-Buddhist Framework. SOPHIA 47, 57–69 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11841-008-0048-5

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11841-008-0048-5

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