Content area

Abstract

This thesis uses a feminist approach to address the problem of women's experiences of suffering dying and death within patriarchal society. It argues that Canadian women have the right to demand legalized Euthansia and to choose physician-assisted suicide as a viable terminal choice. Critical analyses of male-supremacy ideology in politics, religion, philosophy, medicine, and law show its control over women's lives and deaths, and a research study of Canadian women's attitudes and opinions toward Euthanasia and death-and-dying refutes claims of high death-anxiety in women. Reduced incomes, diminished health-care resources, fragmented families, and chronic illnesses increase the suffering of women who die alone, and provide one reason why women must demand social policies that include the right to choose assisted death. Feminist research into women's profound experiences of suffering, dying, and death is urgently needed.

Details

Title
Women and euthanasia: An interdisciplinary approach
Author
Cutts, Beth Alice Margaret
Year
1999
Publisher
ProQuest Dissertations Publishing
ISBN
978-0-612-39183-3
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
304543656
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.