Fictional faces of female suicide: Qualitative analysis of selected Russian-language texts of the school reader
E. B. Lyubov, N. D. Semenova

TL;DR
This paper analyzes fictional female suicide in Russian literature to explore how these characters reflect real-life suicidal behavior patterns and challenge stereotypes about gender and mental health.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel qualitative approach to understanding suicide patterns through the lens of Russian literary heroines, challenging essentialist views of femininity and mental resilience.
Findings
Fictional female suicide characters in Russian literature reveal complex psychotypes that mirror real-life suicidal behavior patterns.
The analysis shows that emotional instability and depression in these characters challenge the idea that femininity or marriage protects against suicide.
Literary examples highlight how suicide can symbolize a 'cry for help,' atonement, or release from life's burdens.
Abstract
Isaiah Berlin’s (1948) exploration of the self-searching of Russian thinkers includes studies of the writers – Tolstoy and others (now – Russian-language texts of the school reader). These studies refute a widespread misconception about the relations between Russian writers and thinkers: namely, that in Russia literature and radical thought form two distinct traditions related only by mutual hostility. The works of Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Karamzin, Leskov, Ostrovsky, and of minor novelists too, are penetrated with a sense of their own time, of this or that particular social and historical milieu and its ideological content, to an even higher degree than the ‘social’ novels of the west. The personal characteristics of suicide victims, heroines of Russian literature, along with the gender aspects, deserve attention in suicidal behavior (SP) focus. To study personal characteristics of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSociopolitical Dynamics in Russia · Discourse Analysis and Cultural Communication
