Cancer-before-cancer. Mythologies of cancer in everyday life
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24994Dato
2018-12-19Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Approaching the presence of cancer in everyday life in terms of mythologies, the article
examines what cancer is and how cancer-related potentialities are enacted and embodied in
the context of contemporary regimes of anticipation. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in a
suburban Danish middle-class community among people who were not immediately afflicted
by cancer, we describe different and paradoxical cancer mythologies and show how they
provide multiple ways of understanding, anticipating, and dealing with cancer in everyday
life. Special attention is paid to the relation between biomedically informed notions of
symptoms and bodily processes, and a ghostly and muted presence of cancer, particularly
when people are faced with more tangible cancer worries. We explore how contemporary
cancer disease-control strategies emphasising ‘symptom awareness’ interweave with and add
to cancer mythologies. We suggest that these strategies also carry moral significance as
directives (be aware of early signs of cancer and seek care in time), and create an unintended
illusion of certainty that does not correspond with everyday embodied forms of uncertainty
and ambiguity. We argue that paying attention to the continuous cultural configurations of
cancer that exist ‘before cancer’ will increase understanding of how the public health
construction of ‘cancer awareness’ relates to everyday health practices such as symptom
experience and health care seeking.
Forlag
Edinburgh University LibrarySitering
Offersen, S. M. H., Risør, M. B., Vedsted, P., & Andersen, R. S. (2018). Cancer-before-cancer. Medicine Anthropology Theory, 5(5)Metadata
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Copyright 2018 The Author(s)