The Return of the Sun
Suicide and Reclamation Among Inuit of Arctic Canada
Series: Advances in Community Psychology;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 13 August 2019
- ISBN 9780190269333
- Binding Paperback
- No. of pages208 pages
- Size 155x231x15 mm
- Weight 295 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
The Return of the Sun shows how Indigenous communities can develop, on their own, successful suicide prevention strategies. Kral details how government colonialism disrupted Inuit lives, especially family lives.
MoreLong description:
Inuit have among the highest suicide rates in the world - ten times the national average. Inuit narratives of suicide provide clues as to what can and in some cases has been done to combat the problem, but until recently they have not circulated far beyond Inuit communities themselves. At the same time, academic researchers have studied suicide among Indigenous peoples, but have stopped short of analyzing narrative accounts for their themes of cultural survival.
Based on two decades of participatory action and ethnographic research, The Return of the Sun is a historical and anthropological examination of suicide among Inuit youth in Arctic Canada. Conceptualizing suicide among Inuit as a response to colonial disruption of family and interpersonal relationships and examining how the community has addressed the issue, Kral draws on research from psychology, anthropology, Indigenous studies, and social justice to understand and address this population. Central to the book are narrative accounts by Inuit of their experiences and perceptions of suicide, and the lives of youth and their community action for change. As these Indigenous community success stories have not previously been widely retold, The Return of the Sun gives voice to a historically ignored community. Kral also locates this community action within the larger Inuit movement toward self-determination and self-governance. This important volume will be of interest to a broad range of social scientists, as well as researchers and practitioners in the mental health fields.
The author's decades-long experience and relationships with Inuit peoples coalesce with his community-based participatory action research methodology to consistently reflect the primacy of commitment to and by Inuit youth and the willingness of others to drive community action and empowerment...Highly recommended.
Table of Contents:
1. The Dynamics of Inuit Social Transformation
2. Colonial Impact on Family and Inuuqatigiingniq/Relatedness
3. "The Weight on Our Shoulders is Too Much, and We Are Falling": Suicide and Culture Change among Inuit Male Youth
4. Resistance and Reclamation
5. Communities Making a Difference: The Youth Take Action
6. Pikkunaqtuq and Footsteps into the Future
References
Index