
@article{ref1,
title="Extended self-destruction: Culpable homicide with subsequent suicide. A heuristic study",
journal="Psyche (E Klett)",
year="2004",
author="Stuhr, U. and Puschel, K.",
volume="58",
number="11",
pages="1035-1062",
abstract="The phenomenon of &quot;extended self-destruction&quot; takes us into a sphere where hermeneutics comes into its own. Familiar patterns of understanding no longer function, and we feel called upon to penetrate to a deeper level in an attempt to comprehend why a murderer first kills his partner and then himself. The witnesses of the deed, so indispensable from a criminological viewpoint, are both dead. With reference to five randomly selected cases, the authors undertake to reconstruct case histories from the police files and to identify an &quot;ideal type&quot; for the phenomenon in question. The invariant element in this qualitative research strategy is taken to be a self-object relationship.<p /><p>Language: de</p>",
language="de",
issn="0033-2623",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}