Suicide in early modern and modern Europe

被引:30
|
作者
Healy, Roisin [1 ]
机构
[1] Natl Univ Ireland Univ Coll Galway, Dept Hist, Galway, Ireland
来源
HISTORICAL JOURNAL | 2006年 / 49卷 / 03期
关键词
D O I
10.1017/S0018246X06005577
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
This is a review of recent English- and German-language publications on suicide, both as an act and a subject of discourse, in the early and late modern periods. It argues that, while publications on the theme have increased considerably in the past two decades, the problematic character of the evidence for suicide has led to a focus on attitudes to suicide at the expense of empirical investigations. The latter have largely confirmed the link between social isolation and suicide, posited by Durkheim, but have revealed differences in patterns across social groups. The growth of lenient attitudes to suicide has proven to be more protracted and contested than originally believed. The ambivalent role of clergy the persistence of religious sanctions against suicide, and continued efforts by the state to curb suicide all suggest that the term 'hybridization' better characterizes the changes over this period than the older term 'secularization'. Finally, this review recommends that historians undertake further empirical investigations of suicide, where possible, and that they broaden suicide research to include suicidal behaviours and alternative responses to despair in order to identify the specfic allure of suicide.
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页码:903 / 919
页数:17
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