@article{22870, keywords = {Youth, Suicide, leprosy, India, Habitus, Ecological niche}, author = {Staples J}, title = {The suicide niche: Accounting for self-harm in a South Indian leprosy colony}, abstract = {
This article analyses the circumstances under which attempted suicide became an increasingly common possibility of thought and action among the young, healthy generation of people who had grown up in the South Indian leprosy community where I conducted long-term fieldwork, despite suicide remaining relatively uncommon amongst their leprosy-affected, and often physically disabled, parents and grandparents. Alert to the pitfalls of analytical approaches that either privilege over-arching structural explanations—like those favoured by Durkheim—or, conversely, give too much credence to individual agency and psychology, my analysis here attempts to chart a course through these polarities. It does so by drawing both on Ian Hacking’s ‘ecological niche’ metaphor—to explore how particular configurations of events and circumstances, at different times, might render suicide related behaviour more or less likely among different groups; and on Pierre Bourdieu’s notion of the ‘habitus’—to consider how particular sets of bodily dispositions might generate certain styles of attempted suicide and self-harm.
}, year = {2012}, journal = {Contributions to Indian Sociology}, volume = {46}, pages = {117-144}, month = {02/2012/06/2012}, publisher = {Mouton}, address = {Paris}, url = {http://tinyurl.com/ydxpokja}, doi = {10.1177/006996671104600206}, language = {eng}, }