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The Contemporary Writer and Their Suicide / edited by Josefa Ros Velasco.

Springer Behavioral Science and Psychology eBooks 2023 Available online

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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Ros Velasco, Josefa, 1987- editor.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Psychology.
Community psychology.
Psychology, Pathological.
Culture.
Philosophy and social sciences.
Literature.
Behavioral Sciences and Psychology.
Community Psychology.
Psychopathology.
Sociology of Culture.
Philosophy of the Social Sciences.
Local Subjects:
Behavioral Sciences and Psychology.
Community Psychology.
Psychopathology.
Sociology of Culture.
Philosophy of the Social Sciences.
Literature.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (315 pages)
Edition:
1st ed. 2023.
Place of Publication:
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2023.
Summary:
This volume is the continuation of the book Suicide in Modern Literature, edited by Josefa Ros Velasco. Considering the positive reception of this book, Ros Velasco launches the second part, entitled The Contemporary Writer and their Suicide. This time, leading representatives of various disciplines analyze the literary, philosophical, and biographical works of contemporary writers worldwide who attempted to commit suicide or achieved their goal, looking for covert and overt clues about their intentions in their writings. This book aims to continue shedding light on the social and structural causes that lead to suicide and on the suicidal mind, but also to show that people assiduous to writing usually reflect their intentions to commit suicide in their writings, to explain how these frequently veiled intentions can be revealed and interpreted, and to highlight the potential of artistic, philosophical, and autobiographical writing as a tool to detect suicidal ideation and prevent its consummation in vulnerable people. This book analyzes several case studies and their allusions to their contexts and the socio-structural and environmental violence and pressures they suffered, expressions of their will and agency, feelings of dislocation between the individual, reality, and existential alienation, and literary styles, writing techniques, and metaphorical language.
Contents:
Part I. Suicide in contemporary writers caused by socio-structural and environmental violence and pressures
1. Beyond the Wertherian motif of suicide: The unity of the self in Karoline von Günderrode’s death
2. ‘I manage it’: Analyzing tropes of suicide in Sylvia Plath’s writing
3. Virginia Woolf’s suicidal character(s): Schizophrenia and the rebellion against the body and the self in her literary works
4. ‘Death beats in my heart everyday’: A sociological reading of suicidal intent in Sara Shagufta’s works
5. Inside the medical suicidal mind: Felipe Trigo’s death by suicide and its self-novelization as a way of understanding suicide in contemporary practitioners
6. The problem of suicide in Kafka. An ethical or aesthetical problem?
7. The tragedy of Vladimir Mayakovsky: Suicide as a dialectical dilemma
8. Paul Celan. The abyss of the word ‘forgiveness’
9. ‘Lines of flight’: The deterritorialization of Gilles Deleuze
. Part II. Suicide in contemporary writers asan expression of the will, the dislocation between the individual and the reality, and existential alienation
10. The ontological suicide of Philipp Mainländer: A search for redemption through nothingness
11. Simone Weil, martyr or suicide? Between martyrdom and suicide: The question of the meaning of life and death
12. The fall of a legend: Deleuze’s suicide and his Spinoza
13. Is suicide a choice? Suicide and Sophie’s choice in William Styron
14. Mortality and meaninglessness: Leo Tolstoy and Mickey Sachs reconsidered
15. Carlo Michelstaedter and the philosophical suicide
16. ‘Two-Gun Bob’ on the pyre: Robert E. Howard’s suicide in the context of his life and work
17. The confusing anxiety of Ryūnosuke Akutagawa
18. Through the mask. Behind the Osamu Dazai’s smile
19. The catastrophe of the self: The case of Unica Zürn
. Part III. Suicide in contemporary writers understood through their literary styles, their writing techniques, and their metaphorical language.-20. Sylvia Plath: Suicidal tendencies in life, poems, and fiction
21. ‘Dying is an art’: Death in the art of Sylvia Plath
22. ‘One wrist, then the other wrist’: The mind style of a suicidal protagonist as portrayed in Sylvia Plath’s The bell jar
23. Reflection of suicidal tendencies in poetry: A computational analysis of gender-themed versus general-themed poetry by Cesare Pavese, Anne Sexton, and Sylvia Plath
24. Black and blue: Revealing suicidality in the poetry of the Afro-German writer-activist, May Ayim
25. Words in poetry: Early and late poems by Haizi
26. Being suicidal after birth: Recoveries of Brooke Shields in Down came the rain, Elif Şafak in Siyah Süt (Black milk), and Fuani Marino in Svegliami a Mezzanotte (Wake me up in the midnight) from ecolinguistic perspectives.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Other Format:
Print version: Ros Velasco, Josefa The Contemporary Writer and Their Suicide
ISBN:
3-031-28982-X

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