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Seeman’s Theory/Durkheim & Suicide/ “The Bully” Debrief

Seeman’s Theory/Durkheim & Suicide/ “The Bully” Debrief. HSB4U Challenge and Change in Society November 5 th , 2013 . “The Bully Project”- a debrief. “Bully” follows the real life experiences of several children and youth as they experience bullying in their schools in the United States. 

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Seeman’s Theory/Durkheim & Suicide/ “The Bully” Debrief

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  1. Seeman’s Theory/Durkheim & Suicide/ “The Bully” Debrief HSB4U Challenge and Change in Society November 5th, 2013

  2. “The Bully Project”- a debrief • “Bully” follows the real life experiences of several children and youth as they experience bullying in their schools in the United States.  • It also tells the stories of two boys who committed suicide due to the bullying they experienced.

  3. The movieis shocking, disturbing, and powerful, evokingmanydifferentkinds of emotions. • The rating for the movie“Bully” was originally given a controversial “R” rating. Why would this rating be problematic?

  4. How Ironic? • How ironic does it seem to rate a movie “restricted”, when this is the reality that kids face every day of their lives? • Contrast the rating of “Bully” to other movies that appear to be more violent with a lesser rating, such as PG-13. What conclusions can you make?

  5. Access to the Film • Releasing the film into theatres where people have to purchase tickets to see it limits who gets to access it, as opposed to screening it for free in schools.  • Screening the film in a school setting allows for debriefing following the film, which is very necessary with “Bully”.

  6. LanguageUsed The filmmakers chose to use language such as “fight bullying”, or “call for an army” to combat bullying, which may seem problematic to many. Why might that be?

  7. Parent/Teacher/SchoolInvolvement • Parents and teachers involved in these situations seemed to make things worse rather than better.  • Several scenes showed teachers and principals minimizing the problem, denying that violence had occurred, and using their authority to silence children’s experiences of bullying.  • Many of the parents seemed at a loss for how to deal with the situations, and sometimes seemed to put more stress on the bullied child by putting the responsibility to stand up to bullying onto the child without an understanding of how severe the bullying was.

  8. Underrepresentation • Children and youth of colour in this film.  • There was only 1 story out of 5 that followed a person of colour.  • Young Black girl in a detention centre= problematic as it reinforces stereotypes of people of colour as criminals.  • This girl’s story also seemed to get the least amount of air time in the film and did not seem to be explored as deeply as some of the other stories.

  9. Question: • Identify and explain which of Durkheim’s suicide types best describes the source of most adolescent suicides today.

  10. Let’stake a look at suicide types throughnewspaper articles… • http://www.cnn.com/CNN/Programs/anderson.cooper.360/blog/2006/06/new-orleans-suicide-rate-nearly.html • http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2010/12/11/bernie_madoffs_son_found_dead_in_apparent_suicide.html • http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-24604558 Can you differentiate between the different types of suicide, according to Emile Durkheim?

  11. Seeman’sTheory • Social Isolation that could be classified into 5 distinct elements • Powerlessness, meaninglessness, normalessness, social isolation, and self-estrangement • Powerlessness: Belief held by the individual that his/her behaviour cannot determine a desired outcome. A person who has an alcohol dependence may feel powerlessness, because they cannot bridge the gap between wanting to become sober, and drinking more alcohol.

  12. Powerlessness comes about when the individual does not believe to have the necessary skills or means to accomplish desired goals* • Meaninglessness contributes to alienation; people feel a sense of meaninglessness when they are unable to predict outcomes of their behaviour or future behaviour; “What’s the point?” mentality An individual eat, sleeps, works, and repeats his daily habits without knowing where his life is leading, with no particular future goals. He feels a strong sense of loneliness and despair.

  13. Normlessness (Anomie) occurs when social norms which govern individual conduct begin to deteriorate and break down; they no longer serve as an effective guide for personal behaviour= leads tosocial withdrawal. A society with too much rigidity and little individual discretion produces normlessness (anomie); a mismatch of personal norms within a system of norms

  14. Social Isolation is usually experienced as a form of personal stress, rooted in social organization and institutions to which the individual belongs= segregation from one’s community Someone who has decided to break free from the “norm” is now isolated from his/her community; i.e. someone from a religious community who has decided to go against the teaching of his/her religion would be socially isolated from their religious institution= segregated.

  15. Self-Estrangement is the state of emotional and psychological being in which the individual denies or negates personal interests and prefers to engage in impersonal, external activities to satisfy needs. • “Gradually becoming a stranger to oneself” The more self-alienated we become, the less attuned we are to our real wants, needs, hopes, and dreams= increasingly more difficult for a self-estranged person to find real joy in life= life starts to lose meaning= we no longer have any idea what might bring us a sense of purpose or fulfillment.

  16. Durkheim and Suicide • Suicide is related with the type of social alienation that Seeman refers to • Social relationships a guiding force contributing to suicidal tendencies amongst adolescents? • Emile Durkheim tried to explain suicide: examination of the social problem of suicide • Social phenomenon linked to social causes • Deterioration/collapse, highly overbearing social relationships

  17. 3 Distinct Types of Suicide • Altruistic Suicide: Individual will commit suicide for the perceived benefit of the group; dying for a greater social cause • Egoistic Suicide: Not part of a social group, overpowering sense of responsibility= guilt over perceived moral weakness/failure; isolated and helpless in times of stress • Anomic Suicide: Responds to social change negatively, no clear modes of behaviour to guide individual= confusion, life is meaningless, brought on by major disruption in life (death)

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