Title of article
Isumagijaksaq: mindful of the state: social constructions of Inuit suicide
Author/Authors
Frank James Tester، نويسنده , , Paule McNicoll، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
12
From page
2625
To page
2636
Abstract
Inuit suicide is the most significant mental health issue in the newly created Nunavut Territory of Canadaʹs eastern Arctic. Suicide rates in Nunavut are 6 times those of Canadaʹs southern provinces. Consistent with other Canadian populations, males aged 15–29 years of age are most at risk.
Various social constructions have been used to make sense of Inuit suicide, a phenomenon of historical interest to anthropologists, who popularized the idea of elderly Inuit voluntarily abandoning their lives to the elements so as not to burden their surviving relatives. An examination of the literature and research dealing with Inuit suicide suggests that three typologies have typically been used to explain the problem: organic or quasi-organic explanations, social explanations involving concepts of social change and social disruption, and socio-psychological models of two types; a risk assessment approach focusing on the circumstances surrounding the deceased or the person with suicidal thoughts and another dealing with norms, values, thought processes and relationships within Inuit culture.
We argue that these approaches offer incomplete explanations of the current problem. Attempts to complete the picture by identifying risk factors have produced contradictory and unsatisfactory results. We conclude that the impact of colonial relations of ruling has much to do with the current problem and advocate an approach that combines narrative research and intergenerational communication with community action to address the problem. Low Inuit inuusittiaqarniq (self-esteem) is an important factor in Inuit suicide, but rather than a psychological problem, has its roots in a history of colonialism, paternalism and historical events.
Keywords
Inuit suicide , Social construction , Narrative research , colonialism , Canada , self-esteem
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
601923
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