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Article
Making Sense of Self Harm
Medical Anthropology Quarterly
  • Sandra H. Sulzer, Utah State University
Document Type
Article
Publisher
American Anthropological Association
Publication Date
5-18-2016
Disciplines
Abstract

In Making Sense of Self-harm: The Cultural Meaning and Social Context of Nonsuicidal Self-injury, Dr. Peter Steggals slowly and carefully circles around self-harm as a social construct. His book gathers up the underlying meanings and contradictions inherent in the practice and inspects them in turn. He makes a case that self-harm as we see it today in the form of skin cutting, picking, and other related phenomenon is unique to our time period and is not universally present across cultures— regardless of other mutilation, cutting, or piercing practices that may exist. And importantly, he starts by addressing our aversion to discussing it.

Citation Information
Sulzer, Sandra H. “Making Sense of Self Harm.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly.