Suicide: The Hidden Side of Modernity

Author:   Christian Baudelot ,  Roger Establet
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
ISBN:  

9780745640570


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   08 August 2008
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Suicide: The Hidden Side of Modernity


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Full Product Details

Author:   Christian Baudelot ,  Roger Establet
Publisher:   John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Imprint:   Polity Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.336kg
ISBN:  

9780745640570


ISBN 10:   0745640575
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   08 August 2008
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION: SUICIDE AND SOCIETY. The Anthropological Contribution. Society Does Not Shed Light on Suicide; Suicide Sheds Light on Society. Suicide: An Enigma To Be Deciphered. 1. DOES SUICIDE PROTECT?. Suicide and Wealth Around the World. In Rich Societies, Suicide Occurs in Poor Regions. Growing Inequalities?. 2. Take-off. India 1950-2000: An Economic Giant Is Born, Suicide Takes Off. 1980-2000: China Awakens and Suicide Rates Rise. 3. The Great Turning Point. 'England Brings Us a Surprise'. France in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: The Meandering Evolution of Suicide. 1900-1948: the parallel between suicide and growth breaks down. 1949-1978: strong growth, stable suicide rate. 1979-1995: slower growth, more suicides. England: Classic Evolution. 4. The Trente Glorieuses. State-Orchestrated Growth. Aggravating Factors ... ... And Protective Factors: Creative Individualism. 5. The Soviet Exception. The World Leader. The Social Femur and the Black-Out. Suicide and Industrialization: A Forced March. And There was Light: Long Live French Demography!. 6. The Oil-Price Shocks and Suicide Amongst the Young. France: Young People at Risk, Old People Protected. There Is No French Exception ... ... But There Are the Exceptions of Japan and Germany. The End of the Italian Miracle and British Phlegm. Taking the Social Dimensions of Age Seriously. 7. Suicide and Social Classes: An Overview. The American Geography of Suicide. French Départements: Income Tax and Suicide. Ken Loach's Devastated England Versus Blair-Thatcher's Greater London. Suicide and Social Milieu in France. 8. The Twentieth Century: Greater Protection for the Ruling Classes. Detailed and Rich Data from the USA. First Clue: Many More Social Bonds. Second Clue: Making the Best of It. Modern Forms of Poverty. Towards a Cultural and Social Minimum Wage. 9. And Yet Women Survive. The Chinese Exception. Asia and the Pacific: Conjugal Difficulties and Female Suicide. Revenge Suicide in New Guinea. Japan Falls into Line. Why Do More Western Women Not Commit Suicide?. 10. Conclusion. Suicide: A Lesson in General Sociology. Sociology Does Not Explain Everything. Can There Be A Sociology of Exceptions?. The Economy, Integration and Self-Esteem. Acknowledgements. Bibliography

Reviews

The general argument is illustrated throughout by a considerable amount of empirical data and rich case studies of a wide range of topics ... The willingness of two sociologists to accept the validity, legitimacy and value of different disciplinary perspectives on suicide is as refreshing as it is unusual. I am less pessimistic than Baudelot and Establet appear to be about the possibility of achieving a genuinely inter-disciplinary approach to researching and understanding suicide. If this book contributes to the realisation of this dream it will have served a very useful purpose indeed. Sociology of Health and Illness


"""The authors are successful in using the admittedly rare phenomenon of suicide to explore the structure and dynamics of life in contemporary societies and reveal the some of the problems associated with marginalization in a (post)modern world."" British Journal of Sociology ""The general argument is illustrated throughout by a considerable amount of empirical data and rich case studies of a wide range of topics ... The willingness of two sociologists to accept the validity, legitimacy and value of different disciplinary perspectives on suicide is as refreshing as it is unusual. I am less pessimistic than Baudelot and Establet appear to be about the possibility of achieving a genuinely inter-disciplinary approach to researching and understanding suicide. If this book contributes to the realisation of this dream it will have served a very useful purpose indeed."" Sociology of Health and Illness"


The authors are successful in using the admittedly rare phenomenon of suicide to explore the structure and dynamics of life in contemporary societies and reveal the some of the problems associated with marginalization in a (post)modern world. British Journal of Sociology The general argument is illustrated throughout by a considerable amount of empirical data and rich case studies of a wide range of topics ... The willingness of two sociologists to accept the validity, legitimacy and value of different disciplinary perspectives on suicide is as refreshing as it is unusual. I am less pessimistic than Baudelot and Establet appear to be about the possibility of achieving a genuinely inter-disciplinary approach to researching and understanding suicide. If this book contributes to the realisation of this dream it will have served a very useful purpose indeed. Sociology of Health and Illness


Author Information

Christian Baudelot is Professor of Sociology at l'Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. Roger Establet is Professor Emeritus of Sociology at l'Université de Provence.

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