ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1976 Race and Suicide in South Africa synthesises the two dimensions of suicide: the personal and the social phenomenon. Its approach is Durkheimian in the use of court records, and phenomenological in the examination of actual cases. About 1500 cases of suicide in Durban from 1940-70 are analysed in terms of race, sex, occupation, marital status, economic status, family type and size, residential area, time and method used. What emerges is a revealing picture of suicide in South African ethnic groups. The findings confute the idea of Durkheim and others that behaviour in suicide conforms to certain universal principles and suggest the crucial role of particular social conditions in determining suicide trends, while at the same time challenging the proposition that a high suicide rate is associated with high status. Instead the author found that there were common emotional syndromes among suicides, but there were contributed to by different social factors.

part one|40 pages

Suicide incidence

chapter 3|6 pages

The Durban records

chapter 4|13 pages

The incidence of suicide

part three|32 pages

Suicide and other social factors

chapter 11|15 pages

Marital status, family and suicide

chapter 12|8 pages

Temporal factors

chapter 13|7 pages

Methods adopted in committing suicide

part four|113 pages

Humanizing statistics

chapter 14|4 pages

The probable factors precipitating suicide

chapter 16|29 pages

Social factors

chapter 17|4 pages

The construction of suicide models

chapter 18|14 pages

Selected cases in greater depth

chapter 19|17 pages

Case studies

chapter 20|33 pages

Suicide notes

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

chapter |66 pages

Tables