Literature DB >> 14498937

Representing childhood cancer: accounts from newspapers and parents.

Mary Dixon-Woods1, Clive Seale, Bridget Young, Michelle Findlay, David Heney.   

Abstract

We present an analysis of newspaper accounts and parents' accounts of childhood cancer. Newspaper accounts construct cancer as a threat to the entitlements and category-bound activities of childhood. Newspaper discourses around children with cancer are predominantly eulogising, constructing children as courageous, stoical and inspirational. Parents are characterised as confederates in the 'battle' against cancer; as fund-raisers; and as guardians of their children's identities. Little attention is given to parents' own needs. Parents' in-depth interview accounts suggest that newspapers are selective and privilege certain types of representations. Parents' accounts, like those in newspapers, construct childhood cancer as an assault on the rights of childhood. Parents also characterise themselves as having a range of obligations founded on dominant discourses about parenting. However, parents' descriptions bear little resemblance to newspaper accounts. Rather than the cheerful, uncomplaining and 'brave' newspaper representations of children, parents report that children can be distressed, anguished and difficult to manage, especially when being encouraged to submit to painful and frightening medical interventions. Parents themselves experience a range of quality of life impairments, including severe role strain, but find it difficult to voice these because they have to negotiate prevailing discourses about the duties of parenthood. Parents' accounts do not allow unproblematic access to some external reality; these accounts are just as constructed as newspaper accounts. Both newspapers and parents may draw on common discourses about parenting, childhood and illness, but newspapers are more likely to represent children in idealised ways and to marginalise parents as resources solely for their child's benefit.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14498937     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9566.00329

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Sociol Health Illn        ISSN: 0141-9889


  5 in total

1.  Effect of media portrayals of removal of children's tissue on UK tumour bank.

Authors:  Clive Seale; Debbie Kirk; Martin Tobin; Paul Burton; Richard Grundy; Kathy Pritchard-Jones; Mary Dixon-Woods
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2005-08-13

2.  Survivors on Cancer: the portrayal of survivors in print news.

Authors:  Elizabeth Edsall Kromm; Katherine Clegg Smith; Rachel Friedman Singer
Journal:  J Cancer Surviv       Date:  2007-10-03       Impact factor: 4.442

3.  "I can't be what I want to be": children's narratives of chronic pain experiences and treatment outcomes.

Authors:  Marcia L Meldrum; Jennie C-I Tsao; Lonnie K Zeltzer
Journal:  Pain Med       Date:  2009-07-06       Impact factor: 3.750

4.  'This wound has spoilt everything': emotional capital and the experience of surgical site infections.

Authors:  Brian Brown; Judith Tanner; Wendy Padley
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2014-11

5.  Cancer-related stigma in the USA and Israeli mass media: an exploratory study of structural stigma.

Authors:  Michal Soffer
Journal:  J Cancer Surviv       Date:  2022-02-02       Impact factor: 4.062

  5 in total

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