Silke Schurack
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Papers by Silke Schurack
mechanism for identifying and ‘legitimizing’ the ‘problem’ of suicide as such with assumed solubility; resulting in corresponding suicide prevention policies. This is,
as I argue, part of Foucault´s notion of ‘biopolitics’, i.e. discipline of the body and population regulation; as well as an issue of power structures.
Suicide is associated with different forms of stigma and myths with partly devastating consequences for the bereaved. It has also been noticed that due to the effects of this mode of death and assumptions about it, suicidally bereaved may be at higher risk of difficult grief and even self-stigmatization. Suicide survivors, too, are subject to the mental health discourse of ‘authorities’, which is problematic insofar that not all suicides can be lumped together under the same gigantic hat of ‘mental illness’. A clear recognition of the diversity of underlying causes resulting in the suicide within the public discourse could be supportive in survivors’ perception of suicide bereavement as well as the mourning and recovery process.
mechanism for identifying and ‘legitimizing’ the ‘problem’ of suicide as such with assumed solubility; resulting in corresponding suicide prevention policies. This is,
as I argue, part of Foucault´s notion of ‘biopolitics’, i.e. discipline of the body and population regulation; as well as an issue of power structures.
Suicide is associated with different forms of stigma and myths with partly devastating consequences for the bereaved. It has also been noticed that due to the effects of this mode of death and assumptions about it, suicidally bereaved may be at higher risk of difficult grief and even self-stigmatization. Suicide survivors, too, are subject to the mental health discourse of ‘authorities’, which is problematic insofar that not all suicides can be lumped together under the same gigantic hat of ‘mental illness’. A clear recognition of the diversity of underlying causes resulting in the suicide within the public discourse could be supportive in survivors’ perception of suicide bereavement as well as the mourning and recovery process.