Literature DB >> 23475453

Cancer knowledge in the plural: queering the biopolitics of narrative and affective mobilities.

Mary K Bryson1, Jackie Stacey.   

Abstract

In this age of DIY Health-a present that has been described as a time of "ludic capitalism"-one is constantly confronted with the injunction to manage risk by means of making healthy choices and of informed participation in various self-surveillant technologies of bioinformatics. Neoliberal governmentality has been redacted by poststructuralist scholars of bioethics as defined by the two-fold emergence of, on the one hand, populations and on the other, the self-determining individual-as biopolitical entities. In this article, we provide a genealogical-phenomenological schematization (GPS analysis) of the narration of cancer in relation to "sexual minority populations." Canonical discourses concerning minority sexualities are articulated by means of a logic of "inclusion and reification" that organizes the interiorization of norms of embodied relationality, and a positive liaison with biomedical technologies and techniques in the taking up of a rhetorical style of biographical compliance. Neoliberal DIY Health logics conflate participation with agency, and institute norms of recognition that constrain visibility to: citizens who make healthy choices and manage risk, heroic cancer stories, stories of the reconstruction of states of normalcy, or of survival against all odds. Alternatively, we trace the performative articulations of queer narrative practices that constitute an ephemeral, nomadic praxiology-a doing of knowledge in cancer's queer narration. Queer cancer narrative practices represent a relationship to health and embodiment that is predicated, not on normalcy, but predicated on troubling norms, on artful failure, and on engaging in a kind of affective mapping that might be thought constitutive of a speculative bioethical relation to the self as other.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23475453     DOI: 10.1007/s10912-013-9206-z

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Humanit        ISSN: 1041-3545


  10 in total

1.  Chronic illness as biographical disruption.

Authors:  M Bury
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  1982-07

2.  A body is not a metaphor: Barbara Hammer's X-ray vision.

Authors:  Ara Osterweil
Journal:  J Lesbian Stud       Date:  2010

Review 3.  What's new in cancer education research.

Authors:  Gilad E Amiel
Journal:  J Cancer Educ       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 2.037

Review 4.  The illness experience: state of knowledge and perspectives for research.

Authors:  Janine Pierret
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2003

Review 5.  Cultural aspects of communication in cancer care.

Authors:  Antonella Surbone
Journal:  Support Care Cancer       Date:  2008-01-15       Impact factor: 3.603

6.  Reflections on the future of women's health research in a comparative context why more than sex and gender matters.

Authors:  Arminée Kazanjian; Olena Hankivsky
Journal:  Womens Health Issues       Date:  2008-08-23

7.  Comparison of lesbian and heterosexual women's response to newly diagnosed breast cancer.

Authors:  P Fobair; K O'Hanlan; C Koopman; C Classen; S Dimiceli; N Drooker; D Warner; H Davids; J Loulan; D Wallsten; D Goffinet; G Morrow; D Spiegel
Journal:  Psychooncology       Date:  2001 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.894

8.  Online cancer education and immigrants: effecting culturally appropriate websites.

Authors:  Jyotsna Changrani; Francesca Gany
Journal:  J Cancer Educ       Date:  2005       Impact factor: 2.037

9.  Sexual orientation and intentions to obtain breast cancer screening.

Authors:  Stacey L Hart; Deborah J Bowen
Journal:  J Womens Health (Larchmt)       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 2.681

10.  Care and the self: biotechnology, reproduction, and the good life.

Authors:  Stuart J Murray
Journal:  Philos Ethics Humanit Med       Date:  2007-05-04       Impact factor: 2.464

  10 in total
  3 in total

1.  Cancer's Margins: Trans* and Gender Nonconforming People's Access to Knowledge, Experiences of Cancer Health, and Decision-Making.

Authors:  Evan T Taylor; Mary K Bryson
Journal:  LGBT Health       Date:  2015-11-13       Impact factor: 4.151

2.  Before narrative: episodic reading and representations of chronic pain.

Authors:  Sara Wasson
Journal:  Med Humanit       Date:  2018-01-05

3.  Awkward Choreographies from Cancer's Margins: Incommensurabilities of Biographical and Biomedical Knowledge in Sexual and/or Gender Minority Cancer Patients' Treatment.

Authors:  Mary K Bryson; Evan T Taylor; Lorna Boschman; Tae L Hart; Jacqueline Gahagan; Genevieve Rail; Janice Ristock
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2020-09
  3 in total

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