This is the first attempt at studying suicide in ancient Israel, ancient Egypt, and the ancient Near East. Jan Dietrich views suicide from a historico-cultural and sociological perspective and focuses on the motives and meanings behind suicidal acts.

Suicide raises questions about the meaning and purpose of human life, and the definition of man as being capable of committing suicide is perhaps one of the most eerie, philosophically sophisticated and theologically inconvenient. Furthermore, suicide and the different ways society deals with suicide are currently being debated not only in society but in different fields of research too. Until now however, there has been no extensive study of suicide in ancient Israel and its neighbouring cultures of ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia and Syria, and it is the aim of this book to close this research gap. Jan Dietrich does not view suicide from medical or dogmatic-theological perspectives, which regard suicide as an act of mental illness or sinful deed. Instead, it is viewed from a historico-cultural and sociological perspective and focuses on the motives and meanings behind suicidal acts. By examining suicide from this angle, it is interpreted as an attempt to solve basic problems of life, and the historical material available is categorised into three basic forms: escapist suicides, aggressive suicides, and suicides of passage and sacrifice.

Autorentext
Born 1974; Professor of Old Testament Literature and Religious History at the University of Bonn.
Titel
Der Tod von eigener Hand
Untertitel
Studien zum Suizid im Alten Testament, Alten Ägypten und Alten Orient
EAN
9783161545719
ISBN
978-3-16-154571-9
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Hersteller
Herausgeber
Veröffentlichung
01.01.2017
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Jahr
2017
Untertitel
Deutsch
Lesemotiv