Durkheim revisited: "Why do women kill themselves?".
Suicide Life Threat Behav
; 9(3): 145-53, 1979.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-473287
Durkheim divided suicide into four social types; egoistic, anomic, fatalistic, and altruistic assigning the first two to modern, western society while relegating the last two to pre-industrial social orders. However, contemporary studies of female suicidal behavior and depression show that such women exhibit personality characteristics of low self-esteem, passivity, dependence and living vicariously for others which correspond to the behavioral indices of impersonalism, submissiveness, passivity, and obedience that produce the lack of individuation characteristic of Durkheim's altruistic/fatalistic suicide categories. On this basis, the author suggests that altruistic/fatalistic suicide may even in the modern world be relevant to the explanation of female suicidal behavior, a hypothesis which, if true, would support the contention that "men and women inhibit different social worlds."
Search on Google
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Suicide
Limits:
Adult
/
Female
/
Humans
/
Middle aged
Language:
En
Journal:
Suicide Life Threat Behav
Year:
1979
Type:
Article