• Produktbild: Farewell to the World
  • Produktbild: Farewell to the World

Farewell to the World A History of Suicide

Fr. 47.90

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.10.2015

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

400

Maße (L/B/H)

22.8/15.4/3.8 cm

Gewicht

689 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Übersetzt von

Byatt Lucinda

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-7456-6245-9

Beschreibung

Rezension

"An encyclopedic but immensely readable account of the social norms that surround, and individual motives that propel, such fateful choices... a deeply insightful book that will interest suicide-prevention counselors and others who are curious about this complex topic."
Foreword Reviews
 
"Barbagli's study is a brilliant synthesis of the history and sociology of suicide, covering both the West and the East, from ancient martyrs to contemporary suicide bombers. He eloquently and persuasively argues for the importance of cultural factors behind huge variations in the propensity to take one's own life from one society to another."
Jeffrey Watt, University of Mississippi
 
"This work is the most important on the sociology of suicide in 100 years. Barbagli lays out the grand picture of changes and variations in time and space, and gives the basis for a theory that is simultaneously cultural, structural and dynamic."
Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania

Produktdetails

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

01.10.2015

Verlag

John Wiley & Sons

Seitenzahl

400

Maße (L/B/H)

22.8/15.4/3.8 cm

Gewicht

689 g

Auflage

1. Auflage

Übersetzt von

Byatt Lucinda

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-7456-6245-9

EU-Ansprechpartner

Zeitfracht Medien GmbH
Ferdinand-Jühlke-Straße 7
99095 Erfurt
DE
produktsicherheit@zeitfracht.de

Herstelleradresse

Wiley & Sons
1 Oldlands Way
PO22 9NQ Bognor Regis
GB
trade@wiley.com

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  • Produktbild: Farewell to the World
  • Produktbild: Farewell to the World
  • Introduction
    Part One: In the West
    I. The Worst Sin and the Gravest Crime
    II. The Key to Our Prison
    III. Killing God, Oneself and Others
    IV. If Poverty Does Not Protect
    Part Two: In the East
    V. Before Becoming a Widow
    VI. Making the Strong and Powerful Tremble.
    VII. The Body as a Bomb
    Conclusions
    Introduction
    Part One: In the West
    I. The worst sin and the gravest crime
    1. The rise in suicide: "a most tragic fact". 2. When did the figure start to rise? 3. The reasons for this growth. 4. Past reactions. 5. Punishments for those who killed themselves or attempted to do so. 6. Dishonourable burial. 7. On the formation of Christian ethics regarding voluntary death. 8. Chastity, rape and adultery. 9. Arabs, Christians and martyrs. 10. Christian beliefs regarding the causes of suicide. 11. Despair and the Redcrosse Knight. 12. Pre-Christian beliefs on the consequences of suicide. 13. Suicide as theft and desertion. 14. A "new crime, that would hardly be believable". 15. Internal and external controls.
    II. The key to our prison
    1. The lawfulness of suicide. 2. A changed sensitivity in the literature. 3. A new name for an old deed. 4. Natural and supernatural causes. 5. Melancholy, hypochondria and hysteria. 6. Depenalisation de facto. 7. Depenalisation de iure. 8. Saving endangered lives. 9. The freedom to take one's own life.
    III. Killing God, oneself and others
    1. Two opposite trends. 2. Two channels of a single stream. 3. Public and private crimes. 4. What brought about these changes. 5. At the forefront of change. 6. Despair, anger, hatred.
    IV. If poverty does not protect
    1. Sociology's "one law" and what remains. 2. When the Jews lost their "ancient immunity". 3. The effects of Nazism and Fascism. 4. Concentration camps and prisons. 5. The Great Wars. 6. Emigrations. 7. Suicide is a "White thing". 8. A question of some delicacy. 9. Sexual orientation. 10. Economic depressions [Recessions?] and crises of prosperity. 11. The unforeseen consequences of the shift to methane. 12. The trend inversion in central and northern Europe. 13. The medicalization of suicide and its effects. 14. The treatment of pain and other illnesses. 15. The steep rise in Eastern Europe.
    Part Two: In the East
    V. Before becoming a widow
    1. Sati. 2. The Rite. 3. The effects of polygamy. 4. Funeral and wedding ceremonies. 5. Through love or coercion. 6. Suicides: condemned and admired. 7. The origin and spread of sati as a custom. 8. Sati or widow. 9. A clash of cultures.
    VI. Making the strong and powerful tremble.
    1. The past. 2. Chinese peculiarities. 3. Continuity and change. 4. Old people and filial devotion. 5. Suicide among Chinese women. 6. Mao Zedong and the May Fourth paradigm. 7. The cultural repertoire of suicides. 8. The State and honouring the virtuous. 9. After a husband's death. 10. Differences compared to sati. 11. Following the death of a fiancé . 12. A way of not submitting to enemies. 13. After assault and sexual violence. 14. Against arranged marriages. 15. The origin of the changes. 16. Against oneself and others. 17. Female suicide in the last two decades.
    VII. The Body as a Bomb
    1. Suicide attacks and terrorism. 2. The modern phenomenon of suicide missions. 3. The rationality of weak players. 4. Nationalism and religious differences. 5. The globalisation of suicide missions. 6. Cyberspace. 7. Becoming a suicide bomber. 8. For a noble cause. 9. An army of roses.
    Conclusions