The first book length anthropological study of voluntary assisted dying
in Switzerland, Leaving is a narrative account of five people who
ended their lives with assistance. Stavrianakis places his observations
of the judgment to end life in this way within a larger inquiry about
how to approach and understand the practice of assisted suicide, which
he characterizes as operating in a political, legal, and medical
"parazone," adjacent to medical care and expertise. Frequently,
observers too rapidly integrate assisted suicide into moral positions
that reflect sociological and psychological commonplaces about
individual choice and its social determinants. Leaving engages with
core early twentieth-century psychoanalytic and sociological texts
arguing for a contemporary approach to the phenomenon of voluntary
death, seeking to learn from such conceptual repertoires, as well as to
acknowledge their limits. Leaving concludes on the anthropological
question of how to account for the ethics of assistance with suicide: to
grasp the actuality and composition of the ethical work that goes on in
the configuration of a subject, one who is making a judgment about
dying, with other participants and observers, the anthropologist
included.