Death on Demand: Jack Kevorkian and the Right-to-Die Movement
Files
Book Title
Death on Demand: Jack Kevorkian and the Right-to-Die Movement
Department
Sociology
Description
Death on Demand explores the polarizing role of Jack Kevorkian—“Dr. Death”—as the most visible leader of the right-to-die movement. From a feature on the cover of Time magazine to interviews on shows like 60 Minutes, Kevorkian was a high-profile figure in the right-to-die movement, capturing constant media attention as he helped more than one hundred people kill themselves. The book opens with the death of Janet Adkins in 1990—Kevorkian’s first assisted suicide—then travels back to Kevorkian’s medical school days and follows his nearly four decades as a lone activist. Death on Demand draws on Kevorkian’s interviews and published work as well as newspaper and magazine articles to describe the doctor’s publicity stunts, criminal trials, years in prison, and activities after he was paroled. Author Michael DeCesare examines Kevorkian’s actions in the context of the right-to-die movement to understand his crucial role in bringing the controversial practice of assisted suicide into the public
ISBN
9781442242135
Publication Date
2015
Publisher
Rowman & Littlefield
City
Lanham
Keywords
Right-to-die, Euthanasia, Assisted Suicide, Jack Kevorkian
Disciplines
Sociology
Recommended Citation
DeCesare, Michael, "Death on Demand: Jack Kevorkian and the Right-to-Die Movement" (2015). Books and Monographs. 53.
https://scholarworks.merrimack.edu/books/53