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Erschienen in: Society 5/2015

01.10.2015 | Culture and Society

Spanning Cancer: Cancer as an Episode in an Individual Life Story

verfasst von: Richard Freadman

Erschienen in: Society | Ausgabe 5/2015

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Abstract

This article discusses ways in which autobiographical writing of cancer experience can be used by non-professional writers living with the disease or its aftermath, and has been used by professional writers in published cancer memoirs, to help find meaning in cancer experience. It also considers wider sociological dimensions of cancer experience in contemporary western culture.

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Fußnoten
1
In her path-finding study, Reconstructing Illness: Studies in Pathography (West Lafayette: Purdue University Press, 1993), Anne Hunsaker Hawkins uses the Freudian term ‘pathography’ for illness narratives by patients and carers. G. Thomas Couser, in another fine book, Recovering Bodies: Illness, Disability and Life Writing (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1997), suggests using the term ‘autopathography’ to differentiate first-person illness narratives from third-person ones. In one of the foundational books in the field, Arthur Kleinman uses the less forbidding term ‘patient narrative’. See Arthur Kleinman, The Patient Narratives: Suffering, Healing and the Human Condition (New York: Basic Books, 1988). I prefer the similarly non-technical term illness life writing because a term like ‘pathography’ is too reminiscent of the cool scientistic ethos that patient and carer writers often critique. Indeed illness life writing is often motivated by the desire to critique that very ethos.
 
2
Charles Dickens, Great Expectations (Hammondsworth: Penguin, 1965), 90.
 
3
Dr Levine suggested this term during question time after the lecture.
 
4
Hugh Kiernan, Love Letters From Transylvania (Melbourne: Michael Hanrahan Publishing, 2015), 156.
 
5
Arthur W. Frank, The Wounded Storyteller: Body, Illness, and Ethics (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995), 97-114
 
6
Katherine Russell Rich, The Red Devil: To Hell With Cancer – and Back (New York: Crown, 1999), 97–98.
 
7
Frank, The Wounded Storyteller, 8.
 
8
Miles Little, Christopher FC Jordens, Kim Paul, Kathleen Montgomery and Bertil Philipson, “Liminality: A Major Category of the Experience of Cancer Illness”, Social Science Medicine, Vol. 47, No. 10, 1485–1494.
 
9
Glenna Halverson-Boyd and Lisa K. Hunter, Dancing in Limbo: Making Sense of Life After Cancer (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1995).
 
10
Deborah Masel, Soul to Soul: Writings from Dark Places (New York: Gefen, 2011), 96.
 
11
Christopher Hitchens, Mortality (Allen&Unwin, 2012), 54.
 
12
Hawkins, Reconstructing Illness, 4.
 
13
Audre Lorde, The Cancer Journals (San Francisco: Aunt Lute Books, 1980), 13.
 
14
Simon J. Williams, Chronic illness as Biographical Disruption or Biographical Disruption as Chronic Illness? Reflections on a Core Concept”, Sociology of Health and Illness, No. 1, 2000, pp. 40–67.
 
15
Susan Sontag, Illness as Metaphor (London: Allen Lane, 1979).
 
16
Arthur W. Frank, At the Will of the Body: Reflections on Illness (New York: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1991), 56.
 
17
Frank, The Wounded Storyteller. See especially chapters Four, Five, Six and Seven. See also Hawkins, Reconstructing Illness, and Couser, Recovering Bodies.
 
18
James Pennebaker, Writing to Heal: A Guided Journal for Recovering from Trauma & Emotional Upheaval (New Harbinger, Oakland, CA), 2004. See also Stephen J. Lapore and Joshua M. Smyth (eds), The Writing Cure: How Expressive Writing Promotes Health and Well-Being (Washington DC: American Psychological Association), 2002.
 
19
John Diamond, C: Because Cowards Get Cancer Too: A Hypochondriac Confronts His Nemesis (New York: Random House, 1998), 52.
 
20
Havi Carel, Illness: The Cry of the Flesh (Durham: Acumen, 2008). Since Carel’s entire outlook is phenomenological, references to the phenomenology of illness experience can be found throughout.
 
21
I know of no finer example of this sort of assisted narrative activity than the ‘narrative therapy’ of Michael White. See especially his Maps of Narrative Practice (New York, W. W. Norton and Company, 2007).
 
Metadaten
Titel
Spanning Cancer: Cancer as an Episode in an Individual Life Story
verfasst von
Richard Freadman
Publikationsdatum
01.10.2015
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Society / Ausgabe 5/2015
Print ISSN: 0147-2011
Elektronische ISSN: 1936-4725
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12115-015-9934-y

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