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Suicide and agency: anthropological perspectives on self-destruction, personhood, and power

Broz, Ludek(Edited by)Munster, Daniel(Edited by)
Part of the Studies in Death, Materiality and the Origin of Time series
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'Suicide and Agency' offers an original and timely challenge to existing ways of understanding suicide.

Through the use of rich and detailed case studies, the authors assembled in this volume explore how interplay of self-harm, suicide, personhood and agency varies markedly across site (Greenland, Siberia, India, Palestine and Mexico) and setting (self-run leprosy colony, suicide bomb attack, cash-crop farming, middle-class mothering).

Rather than starting from a set definition of suicide, they empirically engage suicide fields - the wider domains of practices and of sense making, out of which realized, imaginary, or disputed suicides emerge.

By drawing on ethnographic methods and approaches, a new comparative angle to understanding suicide beyond mainstream Western bio-medical and classical sociological conceptions of the act as an individual or social pathology is opened up.

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£150.00
Product Details
Routledge
1317048458 / 9781317048459
eBook (EPUB)
179.7
01/04/2016
England
English
238 pages
Copy: 30%; print: 30%
Reprint. Previously issued in print: Farnham: Ashgate, 2015 Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.