Emile
Durkheim studies focus on the elements that make people try to commit suicide.
He looks at the different factors of the life ending choices that people
consider before making the final push. The findings of Durkheim’s work are influenced by economic, marital, religious and military factors. Equally, Durkheim made the conclusion that
there are four different types of suicide.
The first type of suicide developed by Durkheim is Egoistic
suicide. The main characteristic of this kind of suicide is that it
occurs in a society that exhibits high levels of individualism. In other words,
the society has deep social integration. Durkheim
made the observation regarding the levels of suicide
among the Catholics, Jews, and the Protestants. His findings indicated that the
rate of suicide was low among the Jews and the Catholics compared to the
Protestants. However, he narrows down his comparison to a single society where
one of the religious groups is the majority. This
is because a national culture may
have various reasons for the number of suicides it records. Durkheim notes that in a situation where one
religious community is considered to be a minority within the larger society,
the community will have strict control over its members. Concurrently,
Protestantism gives the freedom for free inquiry compared to Catholicism and
Judaism (Durkheim 147). The results of allowing for
the free inquiry
are the overthrow of traditional beliefs thereby making Protestantism have fewer common beliefs and practices. Suicide levels also increase as the degree of
education or knowledge also increases. However, knowledge is not entirely the
cause of increases in suicide. In contrast, it is the loss of cohesion among
the religious societies that makes a person look
for more knowledge and in turn commit suicide. In other words, there is a
correlation between the loss of cohesion
and the search for knowledge that leads to suicide.
Durkheim concludes that religion plays a significant
role in preserving an individual from suicide
since religion constitutes the society. He also ascertains that there is an
inverse relationship between suicide and
the level with which a person is integrated
into social groups that the individual stays in.
Additionally, there is also an inverse relationship between suicide and religious integration.
Durkheim
also looks at the second type of suicide, the altruistic suicide. This kind of suicide is
characterized by an individual being overwhelmed by the group beliefs
and goals. Durkheim notes that excessive individualism may lead to suicide in the same measure insufficient
individualism does. By looking at the suicide trends in tribal non-western
people, Durkheim notes that there are
high suicide rates among tribal populations compared to their western
counterparts. In some of the primitive societies, an individual may take it as
his or her duty to commit suicide. For
instance, a person may take away their
life as a result of old age. In this type of suicide,
the ego of the individual is what drives him or her to take their life. The
observation made by Durkheim is that altruistic suicide has lower chances of occurring in the modern societies since in such
societies, there is the increase in the freedom of an individual personality
compared to compared to the collective personality
present in the primitive societies. Therefore, in the case of altruistic
suicide, the person is more concerned
with the group goals and norms with little regard to their own needs and goals. The individual totally
commits himself or herself to the cause of the group. For instance, the Jews took
away their lives when the Romans captured
Jerusalem. They feared that the Romans would make them subjects and tributaries
to Rome thereby changing the kind of life that they were used to. Due to their
love for their city, they could neither
stand its destruction or the transformation in life that they were about to
face. The Jews put their lives at the expense of something bigger than the
value of one’s self (Durkheim 273).
The
third form of suicide is anomic suicide. Anomic suicide is associated with financial and industrial crises. The suicide may
not be as a result of an increase in the levels of poverty during these periods, but crises
of prosperity sometimes cause such suicide. Durkheim notes that suicide
may also increase during the periods of
economic growth and prosperity. For example, in Prussia
the 1850’s when the prices of wheat reached the lowest point compared to the
previous years, the rates of suicide continued to increase in the subsequent
years even though the cheap market held
(Durkheim 229). Furthermore, Durkheim argues that both economic
prosperity and financial crises result in
disturbances of the collective order of
the society (Durkheim 243). Any disruption that is caused to the general equilibrium of the community, even if the interference increases the peace of life, it offers the opportunity
for people to commit voluntary suicide. This is also confirmed by (Liu 210) as he indicates that the rising levels of suicide in the
United Kingdom are as a result of social changes such as increased divorce
rates, the decline in marriages, and
increased income equality. Correspondingly,
Durkheim argues that the society has the moral power to regulate the desires of
the people and when there are some crises the society
loses this regulation. It is in such times that suicide increases since the
sudden changes also require that the needs and values also change. Since it
takes some time for a person to adjust to
these changes, a state of anomie results is experienced in the society.
Durkheim further argues that with industrialization, the society suffers
from a continuous state of anomie. Industrial growth has become a major focus
for most nations making the industry be
an end rather than a way of achieving this end. This
coupled up with the loss of the
role of religion in some of the industrialized societies has resulted in high
levels of suicides. Anomic suicide, therefore,
differs from the other forms of suicides
as it depends on the control that the society has over the individual rather
than the attachment the individual has to the society. Conversely, anomie may result from other types of relations such
as marital relations. For instance, the practice of divorce weakens matrimonial
regulation.
The last form of suicide developed by Durkheim is fatalistic suicide. The main characteristic of this type of suicide is that it takes place when an
individual is put under excessive
regulation. A practical case and instance is a slave who experiences
episodes of pain and heightened oppression. Specifically,
when a slave is under difficult conditions of hardship with no hope of appeling
or remedy, the slave might opt to commit suicide so as to avoid the painful
ordeal (Durkheim 262). Therefore, this kind of suicide
can be attributed to the extreme
despotism of the moral and physical characteristics
of a person. An individual’s personality is
suppressed by some oppressive rules such as the case for slaves or
childless married couples. In the event
of slavery, a person takes his or her
life as they consider their fate to be doomed to slavery. Therefore, fatalistic
suicide considers suicide in traditional
societies. Individuals, on the other hand, want freedom from extremely
suppressing environments and therefore they may consider
suicide to be an option out of such oppression. Another example of fatalistic
suicide is a situation in which a person is locked up in a prison. The person
may prefer to die rather than suffer from continuous abuse and excessive
regulation. Individuals who fall, victims of
fatalistic suicide, usually lack social
integration due to the strict regulation dealing
with the lack of collective social conscience. An individual who has the
social consciousness may not commit a fatalistic suicide. Regardless, Durkheim
does not view fatalistic suicide to be important in the modern society.
Even
though the arguments put forward by Durkheim are true to a larger extent, some of the argument presented when explaining how the failure of
social conditions leads to suicide is not satisfactory. Durkheim’s description
of anomie, social integration, and excessive individualism makes it difficult
to measure the extent to which such
concepts results in suicide. On the other
hand, the reliability of the statistics that were used by Durkheim is questionable. This is because a the time the
data was being collected, there was no
systematic examination of the causes of most deaths. As argued out by the
interactionists, it is impossible to validate how reliable the statistics are
since they are merely social constructions. In some instances as pointed out
by (Scourfield 472), there
is always exists the limitation of carrying out sociological autopsy when
locating the deaths in a given geographical area. Further, anonymity and scarce
data on suicides is another limiting factor when carrying out the study on suicides. Equally, Durkheim makes an
assumption about the meaning of being a Protestant or a Catholic to an
individual. On the other hand, the theories suffer from some shortcomings
resulting from the nature of the society. The classification of a sudden death of a person as suicide depends on how the
society views the claim and it may vary from one social group to the other. The
more a society becomes integrated, the more they may try to cover up incidences
of suicide. The difference in the view of suicide among communities may mean
that one community would be more willing
to classify the death as suicide and
others may not thereby limiting the application of the four types of suicide.
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