Abstract

Abstract In spite of the proliferation of clinical and empirical work in the psychology of death and dying over the last two decades, this literature still lacks a unifying psychological theory that could help integrate disparate observations. George Kelly's theory of personal constructs is well situated to provide this much-needed conceptual grounding. The paper sketches the methodological and substantive contributions that construct theory can make to thanatology and provides a bibliography of relevant materials for the interested researcher and clinician.

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