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Leaving You: The Cultural Meaning of Suicide
Contributor(s): Lieberman, Lisa (Author)
ISBN: 1566634962     ISBN-13: 9781566634960
Publisher: Ivan R. Dee Publisher
OUR PRICE:   $24.70  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: April 2003
Qty:
Annotation: Lieberman looks at the cultural meaning of suicide and how it has gone from being seen as subversive to self-destructive.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Psychology | Suicide
- History | Europe - General
- History | World - General
Dewey: 362.28
LCCN: 2002041140
Physical Information: 0.84" H x 6" W x 8.54" (0.88 lbs) 192 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
At heart, suicide is a subversive act: the assertion of individual will against public authority. How is it, then, that the act of suicide-one with defiant political implications-has come to be viewed as the last refuge of the self-destructive victim? In Leaving You, Lisa Lieberman explores the puzzle of this reigning perception of suicide. Drawing on diverse sources, from biblical stories to Romantic novels, philosophical theories, and psychiatric diagnoses, along with contemporary memoirs of suicidal depression, she shows how the idea of suicide as an act of protest has pervaded Western attitudes toward self-destruction, yet how our contemporary view attempts to deny suicide's disruptive potential by depriving the act of its defiance. Efforts to read meaning out of suicide are not hard to find today, Ms. Lieberman finds. Therapeutic strategies that treat suicide as an illness-medicating the depression while ignoring the underlying motivations that drive people to end their lives- effectively diminish individual responsibility for the decision to die. Sociological explanations that emphasize social causes over individual intentions serve to make suicides passive. Our reluctance to recognize the right to die, to concede this right even to the terminally ill, betrays our uneasiness with the power implied in the act of self-destruction. Ms. Lieberman aims to restore autonomy to the so-called victims by showing how suicide came to function as a vehicle for constructing identity.