Näytä suppeat kuvailutiedot

dc.contributor.authorKosonen, Heidi
dc.date.accessioned2015-07-03T11:36:25Z
dc.date.available2015-07-03T11:36:25Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.citationKosonen, H. (2015). The Death of the Others and the Taboo : Suicide Represented. <i>Thanatos</i>, <i>4</i>(1), 25-56. <a href="https://journal.fi/thanatos/article/view/137417" target="_blank">https://journal.fi/thanatos/article/view/137417</a>
dc.identifier.otherCONVID_24756482
dc.identifier.otherTUTKAID_66407
dc.identifier.urihttps://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/46471
dc.description.abstractThe visual representations of suicide have a lengthy history in Western culture, within which selfannihilation is considered a taboo form of death. In the long reach of the established traditions, the images of suicide have done more than simply illustrate the moral attitudes of their time. Through the versatility of existing templates and signs, images of suicide have posed as vehicles of ideological change; and, within inter-discursive mythologies, they have participated in cultural meaning-making processes around the conceptions of suicide, from the ethics of suicide to its agents, methods, and causes. This article studies the representations of otherness in the suicide depictions of contemporary AngloAmerican cinema, in connection to the Western artistic canon from its suicides obsidionaux in classical antiquity to the imagery of the prostitute in Victorian England. In his research Ron Brown (2001) has noted that the artistic canon of suicide reveals frequent overlaps between several constructions of otherness, from ethnicity to social class, madness, gender and deviant sexuality. Focusing particularly on the representations of gender and sexualities, the article studies the differentiations employed and enforced by the representations of egoistic suicide. I connect Anglo-American contemporary cinema to the continuum of meaning-making visual representations initiated in the artistic canon, and reflect on how characterisations of madness and projections of suicide upon states of otherness participate in the stigmatisation and ‘cultural tabooing’ of suicide. Drawing links to a quantitative research by Steven Stack and Barbara Bowman (2012), my qualitative, small-scale analysis of Anglo-American cinema reveals not only the endurance of many suicidal myths and gendered stereotypes in the cinematic representations, but also shows that these myths and stereotypes are utilised in the creation of victim tropes, which continue to posit suicide into feminity and effeminacy, and conflate sexual marginality with suicidality, having suicides appear, ultimately, in moral tales about sexual deviance. In this regard, the author discusses the relationship between the tabooed death and the cultural representations that present suicide as ‘the other.’ By combining art history and visual cultural research with social anthropology and transgression theory, I contend that representative regimes of otherness both domesticate and stigmatise suicide. Forged in cultural representations of suicide, the link between ‘the other’ and ‘the low’ sanitises represented suicide, while sustaining social hierarchy and enforcing the symbolic order at the core of social order. As suicide defiles the spectacular ‘other,’ the link to otherness marks suicide with the stigma of taboo.en
dc.language.isoeng
dc.publisherSuomalaisen Kuolemantutkimuksen Seura Ry
dc.relation.ispartofseriesThanatos
dc.relation.urihttps://journal.fi/thanatos/article/view/137417
dc.subject.othertaboo
dc.titleThe Death of the Others and the Taboo : Suicide Represented
dc.typearticle
dc.identifier.urnURN:NBN:fi:jyu-201506252440
dc.contributor.laitosMusiikin, taiteen ja kulttuurin tutkimuksen laitosfi
dc.contributor.laitosDepartment of Music, Art and Culture Studiesen
dc.contributor.oppiaineTaidehistoriafi
dc.contributor.oppiaineArt Historyen
dc.type.urihttp://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle
dc.date.updated2015-06-25T09:15:09Z
dc.type.coarhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_2df8fbb1
dc.description.reviewstatuspeerReviewed
dc.format.pagerange25-56
dc.relation.issn2242-6280
dc.relation.numberinseries1
dc.relation.volume4
dc.type.versionpublishedVersion
dc.rights.copyright© Finnish Death Studies Association
dc.rights.accesslevelopenAccessfi
dc.subject.ysovisuaalinen kulttuuri
dc.subject.ysotoiseus
dc.subject.ysotaiteentutkimus
dc.subject.ysotabut
dc.subject.ysoelokuvataide
dc.subject.ysohulluus
dc.subject.ysokuolema
dc.subject.ysoitsemurha
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p10274
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p11114
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p3746
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p7136
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p16327
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p26730
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p626
jyx.subject.urihttp://www.yso.fi/onto/yso/p15369
dc.type.okmA1


Aineistoon kuuluvat tiedostot

Thumbnail

Aineisto kuuluu seuraaviin kokoelmiin

Näytä suppeat kuvailutiedot