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Suicide, Life Course, and Life Story

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 January 2005

Bertram J. Cohler
Affiliation:
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
Michael J. Jenuwine
Affiliation:
University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
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Abstract

This article explores how a life-course perspective and narrative methodology can be used to study risk factors for late-life suicide. A life-course approach to aging and suicide requires consideration of age as both social and personal construction. “On-” and “off-time” events and their impact on adjustmenta are used to illustrate these social and personal constructions. Cohort, period, and histrorical events have potentially profound effects on risk for suicide, yet the study of these effects is difficult because they are so often confounded in longitudinal study. Lifelong personality characteristics that are not life-threatening in earlier life may be of greater risk in later life depending on life circumstances such as physical dependencies. A life-story or narrative approach offers an alternative method for incorporating these complicated factors when studying late-life suicide. The psychological autopsy can be considered a type of “narrative” used by various individuals to gain understanding about a suicide.

Type
North American Perspectives
Copyright
© 1995 Springer Publishing Company

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