The taboos surrounding suicide run deep. I couldn’t speak about my brother’s death for over a decade. This poignant book creates a space to challenge and rethink our own perceptions of suicide and mental health - both as individuals, and as a society as a whole.
Orlando von Einsiedel, Filmmaker
Weaving personal experience together with extensive research, <i>Relating Suicide</i> bears witness to what it means to live beside suicide. It calls for the need to not only talk more about suicide, but also to listen more to a diversity of voices, and to accommodate for what resides between what we can and cannot know about suicide. This is an absolute must read for students and researchers focusing on the topic of suicide and for those who work in suicide prevention and want to understand suicide in more expansive terms.
Katrina Jaworski, Senior Lecturer in Cultural Studies, University of South Australia
With her own sister’s death as poignant provocation, Anne Whitehead attends to the materiality of suicide’s aftermath and makes a compelling contribution to the emerging field of critical suicide studies. A watch, a coroner’s court room, a stretch of seaside beach, a memorial bench become the objects and spaces that allow her to sit with the everyday and ongoing presence of suicide without trying to explain or prevent it. Through deeply felt and creative forms of thinking and writing, Whitehead gently but forcefully forges a path for us to relate to suicide rather than turning away from it.
- Ann Cvetkovich, Professor, Feminist Institute of Social Transformation, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada,
This is a wonderful book. Entirely original, beautifully written, hugely wide ranging. At last a serious and profound engagement with what comes after suicide: the extraordinary disturbances of time and perception for those remaining; the mundane and often forgotten judicial, religious and cultural processes that have sought to contain and circumscribe an event; the historical and ongoing resonances and effects of stigmatisation. Lyrical, analytic, philosophical and factual, this is also achieves that very difficult feat of being personal without being confessional and of being philosophical and political without relegating the profoundly experiential.
- Pat Waugh, Professor Emeritus, Durham University, UK,
Writing against the prevailing narrativization of suicide in terms of why it happened, Whitehead turns instead to the questions of when, how, and where, calling attention to suicide’s materiality as well as its materialization. By turns provocative and deeply affecting, this book brings suicide into conversation with the critical medical humanities, extending beyond individual pathology and the medical institution to think about subjective and social perspectives, and to open up the various sites, scenes and interactions with which suicide is associated.
Suicide is related forward from the point of death, rather than taking a retrospective view. Combining critical and textual analysis with personal reflection based on her own experience of her sister’s suicide, Whitehead examines the days, months, and years following a death by suicide. This pivoting of attention to what happens in the wake of suicide brings to light the often-surprising ways in which suicide is woven into the everyday places that we inhabit, and in which it is related to all of us, albeit with varying degrees of proximity and kinship.
Introduction: Why?
Chapter 1: When?
Chapter 2: How?
Chapter 3: Where?
Coda: Who?
Bibliography
Critical Interventions in the Medical Humanities promotes a broad range of scholarly work across the Medical and Health Humanities, including both larger-scale intellectual projects and argument-led provocations, to present new field-defining, interdisciplinary research into health and human experience.
Series editorial board:
Josie Gill, Associate Professor in Black British Writing, University of Bristol
Guido Furci, Associate Professor in Comparative Literature and Migration Studies, Paris 3, Sorbonne Nouvelle
Nolwazi Mkhwanazi, Professor of Anthropology at the University of the Pretoria
Kirsten Ostherr, Gladys Louise Fox Professor of English and Director, Medical Futures Lab, Rice University
Priscilla Song, Associate Professor of Humanities and Emergency Medicine, Penn State, USA
Samantha Walton, Reader in Modern Literature, Bath Spa University