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Journal Article

Citation

Fullagar S. Aust. N. Z. J. Sociol. 2003; 39(3): 291-307.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Sociological Association of Australia and New Zealand)

DOI

10.1177/0004869003035076

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Youth suicide is a specific gesture of waste, a throwing away of the gift, and thus it embodies a powerful statement about young people's refusal to live. In this article I suggest that it is a refusal to engage with, and be sustained by, the particular economies of value, morality and meaning that govern identity within contemporary cultural life. From a post-structuralist perspective the metaphors through which suicide comes to be known are examined via indepth interviews conducted with young people (n = 41) as part of a larger study also involving adults/professionals (n = 40) within urban and regional communities. Shame figures predominantly in young people's accounts of suicidal experiences and the everyday social relations that govern the expression of emotion. In contrast to the positivist bent of much suicide research and policy, this article argues for the necessity of understanding the social dynamics of shame in relation to the forces of affect that constitute the emergent subjectivities of young people. © 2003 The Australian Sociological Association.


Language: en

Keywords

Metaphor; Affect; Rural; Shame; Youth suicide; Subjectivity

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