Making Sense of Critical Suicide Studies: Metaphors, Tensions, and Futurities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Related Literature
Suicidology, therefore, is unquestionably a social practice—directed toward the scientific study and prevention of suicide. Although shaped by multiple, often competing, epistemologies, the view that suicide was preventable and that science offered the best means for achieving this gave the practice of suicidology identity, unity, and direction.(p. 317)
1.2. An Alternative Way of Seeing and Doing
1.3. Mobilizing Other Critical Frameworks
A successful revolution includes a healthy passion for the inner life. (…) The right to stay alive in one’s senses, and to live in a world that prized that aliveness, was, for her, a key demand in any struggle she cared to wage against coercive government rule.
2. Methodology
2.1. Recruitment and Participants
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Critical Suicide Studies Is a Site of Respite and Fortification
3.1.1. Metaphors of Home
I felt very alone for four years… in sort of the international community, or a larger international community. I was looking for a new home and I feel I’ve found it in the critical suicide studies network.Lily
So it feels, and I think other people think about it too, it feels a little bit like a home.Joe
You know, you want to find people who speak your language… you have to have an intellectual community that can, that you can engage with and can engage with you and be supportive.Colin
When I was writing my dissertation or even in the beginning of my postdoc, like, I really did feel alone, right? And not being able to meet other people… who are interested in these questions about the discourse of suicide, how race and so on intersect, or how they’re mutually constituted, right? And so my hope was, and it continues to be, to meet other people, you know, who have similar interests.Ishmael
3.1.2. Metaphors of War
…it’s necessary to preach to the choir once in a while to sort of get some support, and to develop your argumentation, before you go to war. You need to have a home base where you can come and sort of recharge before you go to war. Because I do believe we still need to go to war, but, uh, but I don’t think, I don’t think we are going to convert any of the true believers in the mainstream.Lily
I would go toe to toe, especially with the chair who was a white male doctor from the school of medicine, who is not my favorite person (chuckles). And he and I would go toe to toe and, um, afterwards, what would happen is: I’d have multiple different people pull me aside from the group. So there were different staff and faculty as part of that task force, they would pull me aside and tell me how much they appreciated what I had said.Brigid
That’s actually where I met an amazing student advocate. I don’t know if anyone nominated her or if she nominated herself, there’s no way she would have been selected. They’re in, there were other people like her, no way they would’ve ever been selected to be on that committee because they didn’t want people who had so much ammunition, like, in knowledge.Brigid
What I hear [in mainstream suicidology] is a pattern of recognize the barriers, stay in between these barriers of what you can, and can’t do in suicide research… The draw to critical suicide research was that it seemed to have an appeal for me as something that would help to take the gloves off more, you know, as it were to recognize, and in a very purposeful way, these nuances and barriers and challenges to suicide prevention that you just don’t see in traditional suicidology… So, finding a way to do research on suicide, that acknowledges barriers and even includes those within the research, but doesn’t stay a slave to them.Colin
It’s taken me three and a half years to write it (a book). And it’s within the framework of critical suicide studies, of course. And the aim with it is to try to start some reflections and initiate some discussions…There are two possibilities here: either my head will be chopped off or I will be silenced to death.Lily
3.2. Critical Suicide Studies Is a Felt Experience
3.2.1. Embodied Grammar of Suicide
I think there seems to be a growing consensus that there isn’t enriched vocabulary for talking about suicide and it’s so anemic, right? Uh, and so I find that interesting too, like that people, at least people who are interested in critical suicide studies are committed to proliferating the vocabulary.Ishmael
I got a lot of food for thought in the work of …Ian Marsh as well, in his denunciation of the pathologization of suicidality and the work of Chloe Taylor, and China Mills, and I really enjoy also the work of Scott Fitzpatrick and [Amy] Chandler as well. They were really kind of denouncing, like, the mistreatments and some of the problems that suicidal people were encountering. But simultaneously I didn’t see kind of a word or a framework to allow us to think about really like all their form of stigmatization and mistreatment as a form of oppression, as it is the case with sexism and heterosexism and then cis-genderism and racism. So I was like, okay, we need to push a little bit further.Tyler
I said ‘I’m coming from a public health point of view. And so that’s my perspective, what I bring to this committee is like public health and response.’ And he was like… ‘ Uh, we can’t…’ What did he say? ‘We can’t fill the ocean’ It was something even worse than that, whatever, like, analogy he used. I just, my mouth just dropped open and I think everyone else’s did.Brigid
He (the advisor) told me not to use words like ‘ethnography’, ‘anthropology’, words like that, more specialist language. In some cases they’re considered dirty words, he said, because, there were cases where, because of the failures or the issues, or, conflicts with other programs where anthropologists were involved, that some people in military leadership got a bad taste in their mouth about it.Colin
3.2.2. Affective Relations
The medical professor did catch himself at one point and very quickly backtracked and like, tried to make amends and repair, cause he saw what it looked like that he was attacking a female student in the meeting. People, everyone’s like backs kind of went up.Brigid
I think that sometimes people, because it touches so much, so many sensitivities, the topic of suicide, people could react very quickly without kind of reading through my argument. So I feel like some people are like ‘We don’t want to go there’ as soon as we talk about assisted suicide, et cetera. And for different reasons, they have very kind of, almost epidermal or very affective, strong reactions about it. ‘No, I cannot even envision this in my head’.Tyler
He said “We don’t study that here, it’s too hard”… I said ‘Well, that’s why I think it’s important because people think it’s too hard and that people don’t want to talk about it’. He was like, ‘Yeah, no, we don’t work on that here. And you need to change the topic’… When people say no to me, I get like this steely (feeling), like ‘Watch me, I’m going to do it’. And I just feel that the discouraging signals that I’ve been getting direct and indirectly are just incorrect.Carmen
And so for me with phenomenology, it was always about the story. Like, if, so my idea was, if I could get compelling enough stories where it kind of like took people’s breath away, I mean, to the point where I was writing them up sometimes, and I’d be sitting crying.Brigid
3.3. Critical Suicide Studies Is a Desire Line
3.3.1. Pathbreaking Metaphors
And there is some interesting work happening in mental health and social justice here at [name of university]. And I’ve tried right to make, uh, inroads and it’s very difficult for humanists to, uh, be taken seriously or acknowledged or recognized, right?Ishmael
I’m not so convinced that you can’t apply lessons learned in one context to other contexts or make some kind of discoveries or realizations in something as narrowly defined as a case study that won’t still open up avenues for future research in other contexts.Carmen
One of my concerns that I need to be constantly alert to, and I think also that goes for the greater field, is that we have to make sure that we don’t fall into the other ditch. I mean, the mainstream is in the ditch of looking at the individual completely decontextualized… At least my aim is to try to see the whole picture and not make the same mistakes as the mainstream who dug themselves into one ditch. I don’t want to end up in another ditch. I want to be on the main road.Lily
3.3.2. Preparing the Ground
Sometimes, you could spend 20 or 30 or 40 years studying suicide or anything, and the purpose isn’t to accomplish something super comprehensive in that period of your life. It might be to prepare the ground for someone 40 years coming after you. You know? So you might have to sit on those boards and talk about policy and talk about this and try to be an advocate for 10 or 20 or 30 years. And it might seem impossible and all these other things, but what you’re doing is… you could be preparing the ground for your, you know, your mentee or protege or future researchers or future applied researchers. So, keeping that in mind is really important.Colin
And if that person’s, you know, kind of focus isn’t suicide, suicidality, or, you know, pieces around that, like at all, it’s gone. Um, so that’s part of what I want to unearth in the evaluation is this idea of, you know, like trust and champions and like what it takes to be able to build those spaces in places.Brigid
3.4. Critical Suicide Studies Is a Yearning
3.4.1. Metaphors of Creation
We talk with the clinicians about, um, how to be creative about the resources that they help people connect with, outside-the-box thinking, you know, not just giving somebody a bunch of hotline numbers, because that can be very alienating.Kim
Academic spaces are incredibly colonized. Like spaces that without being completely deconstructed and torn down, I don’t know that anything is ever going to look different.Brigid
I hope that we can have those very open minded and heartfelt conversations that will be rich and productive and to not become defensive when people start bringing some new ideas. And, um, because those conversation feels like life and death matter. And it is, like, for real, and I just feel like sometimes we lack compassion in our critical studies field, regardless which field it is. And I really hope that critical suicide studies will learn from so many other critical studies field where there is sometimes a lack of listening…And so, yeah, I hope we can develop this as a field to, to welcome each other.Tyler
I am excited and really animated by how this critical turn is really opening a space for having those discussions. And that’s exciting to me and why I find it so interesting how, uh, there seems to be a growing interest, at least in the US, right? In really interrogating the discourse of suicide.Ishmael
And that’s where I am excited and hopeful that I can hear a bunch of other critically minded people that are trying to do what I’m doing, where they’re trying to find the cracks where like maybe that flower, maybe that daffodil could grow, um, you know, like, is there a space?Brigid
3.4.2. Metaphors of Collectivity
The prospect of being, or the possibilities of developing things together, or writing things together with other people that I can draw on other people’s experiences. But also to, to sort of contribute to the international community, this possibility of collaborating. But also just to be able to discuss and reflect together with people that, that, I mean, are sort of on the same page. Not necessarily agreeing on everything. That’s not a good thing, I mean, then that won’t bring us further, and it’s completely okay to disagree, but to have an atmosphere where it’s actually possible to disagree and we can still be friends and we can still discuss. Because that’s difficult in other sort of communities, you’re just shut down. You may be invited, but then uninvited. And if you have an opportunity to forward some of your arguments you’re met with complete silence and then some other people change the topic or just continue.Lily
We are now several people around the world who are trying to look at this (suicide) from other directions. And, there are other ways of looking at this. And since this, I believe this is still a field where we have more questions than answers, we should start questioning all these established truths and try to look at things differently.Lily
I would say that this kind of social justice goal of critical suicide studies is what distinguishes it from a more traditional social approach in sociology that is more quantitative. Um, so for me, this kind of commitment to social justice, political analysis, anti-oppressive values and perspective, it’s really key and central to critical suicide studies. I would say that a little bit like anti-oppressive studies, it’s a field where people are both kind of activists and scholars, uh, and the both are, both of those roles are kind of linked and interlocked, at least for many of them.Tyler
I certainly feel like one [an activist] and I think it’s important and I do believe it’s possible to be both a researcher and an activist. You may be, you need to be, you need to be conscious of when you are what and to what degree. You can be both at the same time, but maybe, in one place you need to be more researcher than activist, but in another place you can, you can allow yourself to be more of an activist.Lily
I became interested in doing mental health advocacy, um, in part, because of my own lived experience, but also, folks close to me that struggled with thought of suicide… As a suicide attempt survivor, one of the things that I’m interested in is helping to make the suicide prevention approach less punitive towards folks that have thoughts of suicide.Kim
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Cesar Riani Costa, L.; White, J. Making Sense of Critical Suicide Studies: Metaphors, Tensions, and Futurities. Soc. Sci. 2024, 13, 183. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040183
Cesar Riani Costa L, White J. Making Sense of Critical Suicide Studies: Metaphors, Tensions, and Futurities. Social Sciences. 2024; 13(4):183. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040183
Chicago/Turabian StyleCesar Riani Costa, Luiza, and Jennifer White. 2024. "Making Sense of Critical Suicide Studies: Metaphors, Tensions, and Futurities" Social Sciences 13, no. 4: 183. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040183
APA StyleCesar Riani Costa, L., & White, J. (2024). Making Sense of Critical Suicide Studies: Metaphors, Tensions, and Futurities. Social Sciences, 13(4), 183. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci13040183