Synopses & Reviews
The first history of suicide in imperial Russia, with an interdisciplinary approach.
About the Author
Susan K. Morrissey is Senior Lecturer at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies of University College London. She has written Heralds of Revolution: Russian Students and the Mythologies of Radicalism (1998).
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements; Introduction; Part I. Public Order and its Malcontents: 1. Victims of their own will; 2. Virtue and vice in an age of enlightenment; 3. The regulation of suicide; 4. Punishing the body, cleansing the conscience; 5. Policing and paternalism; 6. Arbiters of the self: the suicide note; Part II. Disease of the Century: 7. Sciences of suicide; 8. Crime, disease, sin: disputed judgments; 9. A ray of light in the kingdom of darkness; Part III. Political Theology and Moral Epidemics: 10. Freedom, violence, and the sacred; 11. Children of the twentieth century; Epilogue; Selected Bibliography.