Something little to ease my pain: an interpretation of an incident of self-harm

Over the years, the high prevalence of suicide in the Sri Lankan society has attracted the attention of scholars from different disciplines who have offered diverse explanations and interpretations of the phenomenon, focusing on the immediate causes preceding acts of suicide and self-harm. Could it...

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Main Author: Mihirini Sirisena
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Edinburgh Library 2015-12-01
Series:The South Asianist
Online Access:http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/1302
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author Mihirini Sirisena
author_facet Mihirini Sirisena
author_sort Mihirini Sirisena
collection DOAJ
description Over the years, the high prevalence of suicide in the Sri Lankan society has attracted the attention of scholars from different disciplines who have offered diverse explanations and interpretations of the phenomenon, focusing on the immediate causes preceding acts of suicide and self-harm. Could it be that one view of death one hold impacts upon one’s willingness to consider suicide as a potential course of action? In this exploratory essay, I reflect on one story I encountered during my fieldwork among university students and offer a situated alternate explanation to self-harm, where I suggest that, when faced with seemingly unendurable trials, suicide and self-harm may be propelled by a hopeful view of death where death appears as hope not only in the sense that it brings an end to life’s unfair tribulations but also that the end it marks is not an end in itself but a new beginning.
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spelling doaj.art-94e5ca9e2f914bc2a77789823a4c82942022-12-21T22:34:00ZengUniversity of Edinburgh LibraryThe South Asianist2050-487X2015-12-01411302Something little to ease my pain: an interpretation of an incident of self-harmMihirini Sirisena0Centre for Research on Families and RelationshipsOver the years, the high prevalence of suicide in the Sri Lankan society has attracted the attention of scholars from different disciplines who have offered diverse explanations and interpretations of the phenomenon, focusing on the immediate causes preceding acts of suicide and self-harm. Could it be that one view of death one hold impacts upon one’s willingness to consider suicide as a potential course of action? In this exploratory essay, I reflect on one story I encountered during my fieldwork among university students and offer a situated alternate explanation to self-harm, where I suggest that, when faced with seemingly unendurable trials, suicide and self-harm may be propelled by a hopeful view of death where death appears as hope not only in the sense that it brings an end to life’s unfair tribulations but also that the end it marks is not an end in itself but a new beginning.http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/1302
spellingShingle Mihirini Sirisena
Something little to ease my pain: an interpretation of an incident of self-harm
The South Asianist
title Something little to ease my pain: an interpretation of an incident of self-harm
title_full Something little to ease my pain: an interpretation of an incident of self-harm
title_fullStr Something little to ease my pain: an interpretation of an incident of self-harm
title_full_unstemmed Something little to ease my pain: an interpretation of an incident of self-harm
title_short Something little to ease my pain: an interpretation of an incident of self-harm
title_sort something little to ease my pain an interpretation of an incident of self harm
url http://www.southasianist.ed.ac.uk/article/view/1302
work_keys_str_mv AT mihirinisirisena somethinglittletoeasemypainaninterpretationofanincidentofselfharm