Gendered and contagious suicide : taboo and biopower in contemporary Anglophone cinematic representations of self-willed death
Year of publication
2020
Authors
Kosonen, Heidi
Abstract
In this doctoral dissertation, I analyze contemporary Anglophone suicide cinema from the perspectives of taboo and biopower. The aim is to investigate, first, how films with suicide participate in the practices of self-willed death’s biopowered regulation. Biopower refers to Michel Foucault’s theories of the regulation of individuals’ lives and deaths through normative techniques directed at their bodies, sexuality and death. Second, I inspect how cinema both reflects and renews suicide’s tabooed position. In the theories of Mary Douglas, Franz Steiner and Valerio Valeri, taboo is approached as a normative structure with the function of protecting society from particular kinds of dangers; this structure is empowered by ideas of dirt and contagion in such instances where these classificatory borders and collectively agreed values are threatened or breached. By employing discourse analysis, semiology and several methods of visual analysis, I combine visual cultural analysis of contemporary cinematic representations of suicide with theoretically oriented considerations of taboo and biopower. I investigate what kinds of cultural meanings of suicide are created through its cinematic representations and connect these meanings to the normative and classificatory functions of biopower and taboo. The research materials are a corpus of 50 Anglophone feature films produced between 1985 and 2014. The research also includes three case studies of the films Unfriended (2014), Vanilla Sky (2001) and The Moth Diaries (2011) and of the first season of the Netflix series 13 Reasons Why (2017). The central argument in the dissertation is that, in the corpus examined, suicide cinema reflects suicide’s tabooed ontology and status in its othering, marginalizing, stigmatizing, domesticating and pornifying tendencies. I also argue that taboo and biopower are present in the fears of contagion that occasionally justify the censorship of suicide’s representations. Further, I maintain that suicide cinema participates in suicide’s subjugation to biopower, especially in its gendered and medicalized aspects. Hundreds of titles featuring suicide are released every year in the popular medium of Anglophone cinema. Understanding the role of taboo and biopower in these wide-ranging representations can help reveal the curious dynamic by which suicide is heavily represented in the media while it is silently struggled with and mourned in real life as a shameful death.
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Publication type
Publication format
Monograph
Audience
Scientific
MINEDU's publication type classification code
G5 Doctoral dissertation (articles)
Publication channel information
Open access
Open access in the publisher’s service
Yes
Open access of publication channel
Fully open publication channel
Self-archived
No
Other information
Fields of science
Theatre, dance, music, other performing arts; History and archaeology
Keywords
[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]
Publication country
Finland
Internationality of the publisher
Domestic
Language
English
International co-publication
No
Co-publication with a company
No
The publication is included in the Ministry of Education and Culture’s Publication data collection
Yes