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Search/ing for missing people: Families living with ambiguous absence
Affiliation:1. Geographical and Earth Sciences, East Quadrangle, University of Glasgow, G12 8QQ, UK;2. Division of Psychology, School of Social and Health Sciences, Kydd Building, Bell Street, University of Abertay, Dundee DD1 1HG, UK;3. IRIS, University College London, London, WC1E 6BT, UK
Abstract:Families of missing people are often understood as inhabiting a particular space of ambiguity, captured in the phrase ‘living in limbo’ (Holmes, 2008). To explore this uncertain ground, we interviewed 25 family members to consider how human absence is acted upon and not just felt within this space ‘in between’ grief and loss (Wayland, 2007). In the paper, we represent families as active agents in spatial stories of ‘living in limbo’, and we provide insights into the diverse strategies of search/ing (technical, physical and emotional) in which they engage to locate either their missing member or news of them. Responses to absence are shown to be intimately bound up with unstable spatial knowledges of the missing person and emotional actions that are subject to change over time. We suggest that practices of search are not just locative actions, but act as transformative processes providing insights into how families inhabit emotional dynamism and transition in response to the on-going ‘missing situation’ and ambiguous loss (Boss, 1999, 2013).
Keywords:Families  Missing people  Absence  Ambiguous loss  Search
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