Author: Thomas Joiner
Translator: Jae-Sung Kim
Publisher: Hwangsojari
336 pages | 223*152mm
Important! Please read before you order! |
>>>This book is written in Korean. |
About This Book
In the wake of a suicide, the most troubling questions are invariably
the most difficult to answer: How could we have known? What could we
have done? And always, unremittingly: Why? Written by a clinical
psychologist whose own life has been touched by suicide, this book
offers the clearest account ever given of why some people choose to die.
Drawing on extensive clinical and epidemiological evidence, as well as
personal experience, Thomas Joiner brings a comprehensive understanding
to seemingly incomprehensible behavior. Among the many people who have
considered, attempted, or died by suicide, he finds three factors that
mark those most at risk of death: the feeling of being a burden on loved
ones; the sense of isolation; and, chillingly, the learned ability to
hurt oneself. Joiner tests his theory against diverse facts taken from
clinical anecdotes, history, literature, popular culture, anthropology,
epidemiology, genetics, and neurobiology--facts about suicide rates
among men and women; white and African-American men; anorexics,
athletes, prostitutes, and physicians; members of cults, sports fans,
and citizens of nations in crisis.
The result is the most coherent and persuasive explanation ever given of
why and how people overcome life's strongest instinct,
self-preservation. Joiner's is a work that makes sense of the
bewildering array of statistics and stories surrounding suicidal
behavior; at the same time, it offers insight, guidance, and essential
information to clinicians, scientists, and health practitioners, and to
anyone whose life has been affected by suicide.
About the Author
Thomas Joiner is Distinguished Research Professor and
Bright-Burton Professor of Psychology at Florida State University and
author of Why People Die by Suicide.
Reviews
In a book both personal and scientific, Thomas Joiner gives
us the deepest understanding of suicide that has yet been written. He
reminds us that to go on living we need to feel that we belong to
someone and that we are effective. But he adds a surprising third
factor--we must not break down our fear of death. Joiner offers wise
guidance not only to professionals, but to those who must live on after
this kind of death in the family.
--Pauline Boss, author of Ambiguous Loss (20051201)
As a survivor, I find this book to be illuminating, informative, and,
most of all, healing. Joiner searches for the "why" of suicide as both a
scientist and a survivor himself, and his research and insights help us
to make sense of the pain and confusion that led our loved ones to end
their lives.
--Carla Fine, author of No Time To Say Goodbye: Surviving The Suicide Of
A Loved One (20060420)
Joiner provides an elegant description of what leads people to commit
suicide and what professionals, families, and friends can do to prevent
the crisis that this tragedy creates for everyone involved.
--Aaron T. Beck, M.D., University Professor of Psychiatry, University of
Pennsylvania (20060712)
Joiner provides a fascinating contribution to psychological literature
that is certain to join the ranks of Émile Durkheim's Suicide and Karl
Menninger's Man Against Himself. Not only has Joiner established
professional prominence in suicidology, but he also has a profound
personal relationship with the subject: his own father died by suicide.
Drawing on the pain of this experience as well as on clinical and
epidemiological evidence, Joiner has managed to conduct significant
research into why some people die by suicide, while others survive their
attempts at self-annihilation. His persuasive thesis is that practice,
mental and physical, is what separates the completers from the
attempters. In particular, those who have become desensitized to
physical pain are most likely to orchestrate their own deaths
successfully. Joiner also identifies perceived burdensomeness, little
sense of belonging, genetics, neurobiology, and mental disorders as
contributors to suicidality and completion.
--Lynne F. Maxwell (Library Journal 20070608)
Taking one's own life goes against one of our strongest urges--the
instinct of self-preservation. The deterioration of this instinct, says
Thomas Joiner, should be regarded as a symptom of disease...His theory,
outlined in Why People Die by Suicide is that it happens when severely
depressed people acquire fearlessness. How do people become fearless?
Through practice and learning, he says. This explains the bouts of
self-harm or failed suicide attempts that are not cries for help so much
as rehearsals for a deadly finale.
--Anjana Ahuja (The Times )
[Joiner's] theory is the most comprehensive yet put forth to explain why
some people end their lives. Joiner offers a dizzying array of studies
to shore up his argument, and some of the evidence he offers is quite
novel for the lay reader.
--Philip Connors (Newsday )
Mr. Joiner's book is a useful guide to suicidal behavior...Mr. Joiner
draws on many scientific fields--genetics, neuroscience, psychiatry,
evolutionary psychology--all of which, he thinks, have something to
offer the study of suicide. The major lesson of his book is the
necessity of keeping the ability to commit suicide from coinciding with
the desire for death...His book is a practical study, full of
up-to-the-minute research.
--Thomas Meaney (Wall Street Journal )
It is the synergy and tension between Joiner's dual identity as suicide
survivor and academic that imbues this book with both its power and a
certain logical grandiosity...Joiner is to be commended for a powerful
effort to integrate science and personal tragedy. In an easily
digestible style, he reviews the breadth of modern suicide
scholarship--biological, psychological, and social, and presents his
integration clearly and forcefully.
--J. Michael Bostwick (Boston Globe )
The Florida State University psych professor, who grew up here and
endured the suicide of his father not far from their Atlanta home,
asserts that suicide is not simply an act but a process. Joiner
describes how a person works up to suicide by overcoming the fear of
death and the instinct for self-preservation. In accessible, somber
prose, he also explains the conditions under which a person becomes
suicidal.
--Lawrence Wright (Atlanta Journal-Constitution )
Many researchers and clinicians have tried to explain why people commit
suicide. The majority of studies that have been conducted to date have
examined correlates and risk factors for suicidal behavior. However,
many of these risk factors are found throughout the general population,
and the vast majority of people do not engage in suicidal behavior. Dr.
Joiner's theory is one of the first that integrates many of these risk
factors into an explanatory model. His model makes sense both
intuitively and empirically. What makes Dr. Joiner's theory particularly
credible is the research that he and his students have done to support
his model. Additionally, he is able to use his theory to explain such
diverse behaviors as the suicide attacks on 9/11 and Kurt Cobain's
suicide. What makes this book particularly interesting is that it begins
with a prologue detailing Dr. Joiner's personal account of loss by
suicide...This book is a must-read for clinicians and researchers who
are involved with suicidal patients. Dr. Joiner's model highlights the
acute risk factors for serious suicidal behavior thus providing tangible
targets for assessment and treatment. Additionally this volume is an
excellent resource for family members who have lost a loved one to
suicide...Based upon the book's combination of sound scientific research
with thoughtful personal reflections and examples it is given a strong
recommendation.
--Elizabeth L. Jeglic (Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Book Reviews )
The change in the way I now look at my dad's death comes because of
[this] compelling book.
--Steve Martin (The Times )
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