Inscrutable Suicide

Inscrutable Suicide
Author: Kelly Marie Neil
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2014
Genre:
ISBN: 9781321363500

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Inscrutable Suicide: Politics, Gender, and the Felo de se in Early Modern Drama reveals how representations of suicide in English drama constitute new but inchoate forms of individual and collective agency in early modern law and politics. At the heart of this project is the term for a criminal suicide found to be committed willfully by a sane person: felo de se, or felon of the self. First articulated in Bracton's thirteenth-century treatise on English common law, the term felo de se provokes several questions: who is the "self' against whom the crime is committed? To whom does the self belong and from whom can this self be taken? These questions provoked early modern people to test the reach of the sovereign's power and the extent of a subject's agency. In my analysis, I focus on characters who attempt, desire, or commit suicide and who are marginalized by their gender or sexuality. I draw from early modern medical treatises, coroners' inquests, popular pamphlets, political writings, and martyrologies as I survey canonical plays (Shakespeare's King Lear and Hamlet), a non-canonical play (John Fletcher's The Tragedie of Bonduca), and a closet drama (Milton's Samson Agonistes). I suggest that legal categories of suicide-the felo de se and non compos mentis, or non-culpable suicides found to be committed by a person not of sound mind-fail to adequately describe the dramatic representations of suicide that I analyze. When audience members or readers evaluate a character who commits, attempts, or considers suicide and who is politically disenfranchised by their gender or sexuality, they implicitly critique the legal and political categories of identity upon which authorities justify their power and their regulation of non-normative bodies. This project ultimately contests a grand narrative of suicide generally accepted by literary critics and historians that proclaims suicide to have become, by the twentieth century, a medicalized and tolerated act rather than a sinful or criminal one, as it supposedly was in the early modern period. I show that multiple meanings of suicide, drawn from multiple classical and biblical models of suicide, existed simultaneously in the early modern period as well as today. The multiple meanings and models of suicide, I argue, had a profound impact on the ways that authors represented suicide in early modern dramatic performances and dramatic texts. Furthermore, these multiple meanings and models provided audiences with an array of choices that prompted them to engage in interpretative practices of evaluation and judgment. These interpretative practices invited audiences to participate in and become cognizant of the potential for collective agency that might, in some ways, challenge traditional legal and political authority. The spectacle of the inscrutable suicidal character on the stage amplifies contradictions within English law regarding how the ideal political and legal subject was to appear, act, and desire. For instance, despite early modern culture's insistence that the ideal political subject was male, both men and women suspected of suicide could posthumously face trial and punishments for their acts of self-killing because authorities viewed them as violating the monarch's authority. By idealizing the political subject as male but implicitly legitimizing the political threats suicidal women posed, authorities created a slippery space where women who killed themselves demonstrated a political agency supposedly inaccessible to them. Political authorities also idealized the political subject as able-bodied (as well as able-minded) and heteronormative. But those authorities invited debate about how to distinguish between a non compos mentis and a felo de se death. Examining the extent to which a person was mentally disabled lay at the heart of these designations; mental disabilities included not only insanity or depression but also a spectrum of non-heteronormative desires evidenced by a character's impotency and homoeroticism. When a seemingly disabled or queer figure commits suicide in the dramas I analyze, his or her death provokes audiences and readers to evaluate if insanity or non-heteronormative desire could obfuscate or invoke agency. My focus on the disruptive potential of the suicidal body on the stage energizes critical discussions of gender, disability, and queerness as I demonstrate the political subversiveness of suicide that critics have overlooked.

Assisted Suicide in Canada

Assisted Suicide in Canada
Author: Travis Dumsday
Publisher: UBC Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2021-09-01
Genre: Law
ISBN: 0774866047

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In 2015, the Supreme Court of Canada struck down criminal laws prohibiting medical assistance in dying (MAID) in its Carter v Canada ruling. Assisted Suicide in Canada delves into the moral and policy dimensions of this case, summarizing other key rulings and subsequent legislation. Travis Dumsday explores thorny topics such as freedom of conscience for healthcare professionals, public funding for MAID, and extensions of eligibility. Carter v Canada will alter Canadians’ understanding of life, death, and the practice of medicine for generations. This nuanced work will help readers think through the legal, ethical, and policy issues surrounding assisted dying.

This Is How You Die

This Is How You Die
Author: Matthew Bennardo
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing
Total Pages: 398
Release: 2013-07-16
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1455529400

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If a machine could predict how you would die, would you want to know? This is the tantalizing premise of This Is How You Die, the brilliant follow-up anthology to the self-published bestseller, Machine of Death. THIS IS HOW YOU DIE Stories of the Inscrutable, Infallible, Inescapable Machine of Death The machines started popping up around the world. The offer was tempting: with a simple blood test, anyone could know how they would die. But the machines didn't give dates or specific circumstances-just a single word or phrase. DROWNED, CANCER, OLD AGE, CHOKED ON A HANDFUL OF POPCORN. And though the predictions were always accurate, they were also often frustratingly vague. OLD AGE, it turned out, could mean either dying of natural causes, or being shot by an elderly, bedridden man in a botched home invasion. The machines held onto that old-world sense of irony in death: you can know how it's going to happen, but you'll still be surprised when it does. This addictive anthology--sinister, witty, existential, and fascinating--collects the best of the thousands of story submissions the editors received in the wake of the success of the first volume, and exceeds the first in every way.

Investigating Identities

Investigating Identities
Author:
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2009-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 904202917X

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Investigating Identities: Questions of Identity in Contemporary International Crime Fiction is one of the relatively few books to date which adopts a comparative approach to the study of the genre. This collection of twenty essays by international scholars, examining crime fiction production from over a dozen countries, confirms that a comparative approach can both shed light on processes of adaptation and appropriation of the genre within specific national, regional or local contexts, and also uncover similarities between the works of authors from very different areas.Contributors explore discourse concerning national and historical memory, language, race, ethnicity, culture and gender, and examine how identity is affirmed and challenged in the crime genre today. They reveal a growing tendency towards hybridization and postmodern experimentation, and increasing engagement with philosophical enquiry into the epistemological dimensions of investigation. Throughout, the notion of stable identities is subject to scrutiny.While each essay in itself is a valuable addition to existing criticism on the genre, all the chapters mutually inform and complement each other in fascinating and often unexpected ways. This volume makes an important contribution to the growing field of crime fiction studies and to ongoing debates on questions of identity. It will therefore be of special interest to students and scholars of the crime genre, identity studies and comparative literature. It will also appeal to all who enjoy reading contemporary crime fiction.

Phenomenology of Suicide

Phenomenology of Suicide
Author: Maurizio Pompili
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 221
Release: 2017-10-10
Genre: Medical
ISBN: 3319479768

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This book will help the reader to understand the suicidal mind from a phenomenological point of view, shedding light on the feelings of suicidal individuals and also those of clinicians. In accordance with the importance that the phenomenological approach attaches to subjectivity and sense of self as the starting points for knowledge, emphasis is placed on the need for the clinician to focus on the subjective experiences of the at-risk individual, to set aside prior assumptions, judgments, or interpretations, and to identify ways of bridging gaps in communication associated with negative emotions. The vital importance of empathy is stressed, drawing attention to the insights offered by neuroimaging studies and the role of mirror neurons in social cognition. It is widely acknowledged that when a clinician meets a person who wants to die by suicide, the clinician does not fully understand what is going on inside the mind of that individual. This book recognizes that any approach to suicide prevention must promote understanding of suicidal thoughts and feelings. The awareness that it fosters and the innovative perspectives that it presents will appeal to a wide readership.

Sedation, Suicide, and the Limits of Ethics

Sedation, Suicide, and the Limits of Ethics
Author: James A. Dunson
Publisher: Lexington Books
Total Pages: 143
Release: 2017-12-20
Genre: Philosophy
ISBN: 0739199226

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In this book, James Dunson explores end-of-life ethics including physician-assisted suicide (PAS) and continuous sedation until death. He argues that ethical debates currently ignore the experience of the dying patient in an effort to focus on policy creation, and proposes that the dying experience should instead be prioritized and used to inform policy development. The author makes the case that PAS should be recognized as a legally and morally permissible option for a very particular kind of patient: terminally ill with fewer than six months to live and capable of conscious consent. Since focusing on the patient's experience of this end-of-life dilemma transforms some of the basic concepts we use to engage in the PAS debate, the argument has implications for patient care and the training of medical professionals.

Machine of Death

Machine of Death
Author: Ryan North
Publisher: Machines of Death LLC
Total Pages: 468
Release: 2010
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0982167121

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MACHINE OF DEATH tells thirty-four different stories about people who know how they will die. Prepare to have your tears jerked, your spine tingled, your funny bone tickled, your mind blown, your pulse quickened, or your heart warmed. Or better yet, simply prepare to be surprised. Because even when people do have perfect knowledge of the future, there's no telling exactly how things will turn out.

The Marlburian

The Marlburian
Author: Marlborough coll
Publisher:
Total Pages: 514
Release: 1885
Genre:
ISBN:

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