Men and suicide: A cultural scripts perspective
LMB/002, Law and Sociology Building, Campus East, University of York (Map)
Event details
A dominant idea in professional and popular discourse is that men’s suicidal behaviour is the same everywhere in terms of triggers, motives and outcomes. A prevailing belief about triggers is that men’s suicidality is driven by public life (eg employment) problems - in contrast to women’s suicidality, which is believed to be caused by private-life (eg close relationship) problems.
In this presentation Silvia challenges, based on evidence from her research and beyond, dominant myths of male suicidality and propose new ways to understand it. She starts with a review of the often-overlooked variability in triggers, motives and outcomes of men’s suicidality, with examples across communities and countries. For example, she presents evidence suggesting that men’s behaviour in their private lives matters in their suicide likelihood - specifically, evidence from a multinational study that men’s suicide rates are lower in countries where men do more family care work.
Next, Silvia describes cultural-scripts-of-suicidality theory and discuss how taking a cultural-scripts perspective helps making sense of male suicidality across communities and countries, and by intersectionality of, for example, age.
Her presentation ends with examples of how taking a cultural-scripts perspective on male suicidality stimulates new ideas for its prevention.
About the speaker
Professor Silvia Sara Canetto, Colorado State University, USA
Venue details
Wheelchair accessible
Hearing loop