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Journal Article

Citation

Said M. South Asia Res. 2014; 34(1): 19-30.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0262728013517027

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This article shows how successful youth suicides and attempted suicides in the south of Sri Lanka are utilised as tools against an oppressive and limiting kinship structure. The majority of youth suicides in southern Sri Lanka appear to be aimed at disempowering close kin and publicly challenge the moral authority of the kin network, resulting in cleavages in the local distribution of power and status. The forms of suicide imbue the victim's family with shame, thus questioning and challenging the 'boundedness' of the family unit. Using three contrasting case studies involving a domestic argument between a young man and his spouse, a young couple from rival families, and a young woman in a post-tsunami camp, this fieldwork-based research illustrates how youth suicides bring to the fore internal tensions in the family. Copyright © 2014 SAGE Publications.


Language: en

Keywords

suicide; social networks; Sri Lanka; shame; dependency; kinship

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