1st Edition

Suicide in Twentieth-Century Japan

By Francesca Di Marco Copyright 2016
212 Pages
by Routledge

212 Pages
by Routledge

212 Pages
by Routledge

Japan’s suicide phenomenon has fascinated both the media and academics, although many questions and paradoxes embedded in the debate on suicide have remained unaddressed in the existing literature, including the assumption that Japan is a "Suicide Nation". This tendency causes common misconceptions about the suicide phenomenon and its features. Aiming to redress the situation, this book... Read more

Introduction Part I 1. Biologizing the Meaning of Suicide (1880s-1930s) 2. Culturalizing the Meaning of Suicide (1930s-1945) Part II 3. Humanizing the Meaning of Suicide (1945-1960) 4. The Triumph of the ‘Suicide Nation’ (1960-1985) Conclusion

Biography

Francesca Di Marco is an independent researcher and cultural historian, specialising in the history of modern Japan.

'Francesca Di Marco’s study is thus timely and offers a much-needed contribution to an emerging English-language literature on mental health and illness in modern Japan...Di Marco also offers the important observation—which appears to hold cross all four phases of her chronology—that between cultural narratives and the universalizing biological one, the individual meaning of each suicide appears often to have been lost.'

Christopher Harding, University of Endinburgh
The Journal of Japanese Studies Vol. 44