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Lumps in the breast : negotiating risks after a cancer diagnosis.

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Lumps in the breast : negotiating risks after a cancer diagnosis. / Morris, Sara M.
In: Health, Risk and Society, Vol. 1, No. 2, 07.1999, p. 179-194.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Vancouver

Morris SM. Lumps in the breast : negotiating risks after a cancer diagnosis. Health, Risk and Society. 1999 Jul;1(2):179-194. doi: 10.1080/13698579908407017

Author

Morris, Sara M. / Lumps in the breast : negotiating risks after a cancer diagnosis. In: Health, Risk and Society. 1999 ; Vol. 1, No. 2. pp. 179-194.

Bibtex

@article{79f29d17908346b5a7b12c3789aa58b7,
title = "Lumps in the breast : negotiating risks after a cancer diagnosis.",
abstract = "The breast has become a spatial and temporal location for risk. Yet finding a lump in the breast, whether through touch or technology, is a complex process, which involves a variable combination of physical, emotional and cognitive tasks for the woman involved. The lump is both 'self' and 'other', in that it is physically positioned within the boundaries of the woman's body, but may be conceptualised as 'alien'. In addition it is defined as a life-threatening lump through the intervention of expert others, and by the use of technology. Women diagnosed with breast cancer are thus not only faced with a frightening illness, and an entrance into the medical world and all it entails, but also with questions of the sell and its boundaries. In this risky arena, where selfhood and life itself are threatened, women seek ways of managing the experience which will restore them. One way they may do this is through creating a dialogue with the ambiguous entity that is a breast lump. 'Getting on with it' becomes an aim which helps the women address issues of selfhood, risk, uncertainty and guilt, and to continue with their lives.",
keywords = "breast cancer, risk, women, screening",
author = "Morris, {Sara M.}",
year = "1999",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1080/13698579908407017",
language = "English",
volume = "1",
pages = "179--194",
journal = "Health, Risk and Society",
issn = "1369-8575",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Lumps in the breast : negotiating risks after a cancer diagnosis.

AU - Morris, Sara M.

PY - 1999/7

Y1 - 1999/7

N2 - The breast has become a spatial and temporal location for risk. Yet finding a lump in the breast, whether through touch or technology, is a complex process, which involves a variable combination of physical, emotional and cognitive tasks for the woman involved. The lump is both 'self' and 'other', in that it is physically positioned within the boundaries of the woman's body, but may be conceptualised as 'alien'. In addition it is defined as a life-threatening lump through the intervention of expert others, and by the use of technology. Women diagnosed with breast cancer are thus not only faced with a frightening illness, and an entrance into the medical world and all it entails, but also with questions of the sell and its boundaries. In this risky arena, where selfhood and life itself are threatened, women seek ways of managing the experience which will restore them. One way they may do this is through creating a dialogue with the ambiguous entity that is a breast lump. 'Getting on with it' becomes an aim which helps the women address issues of selfhood, risk, uncertainty and guilt, and to continue with their lives.

AB - The breast has become a spatial and temporal location for risk. Yet finding a lump in the breast, whether through touch or technology, is a complex process, which involves a variable combination of physical, emotional and cognitive tasks for the woman involved. The lump is both 'self' and 'other', in that it is physically positioned within the boundaries of the woman's body, but may be conceptualised as 'alien'. In addition it is defined as a life-threatening lump through the intervention of expert others, and by the use of technology. Women diagnosed with breast cancer are thus not only faced with a frightening illness, and an entrance into the medical world and all it entails, but also with questions of the sell and its boundaries. In this risky arena, where selfhood and life itself are threatened, women seek ways of managing the experience which will restore them. One way they may do this is through creating a dialogue with the ambiguous entity that is a breast lump. 'Getting on with it' becomes an aim which helps the women address issues of selfhood, risk, uncertainty and guilt, and to continue with their lives.

KW - breast cancer

KW - risk

KW - women

KW - screening

U2 - 10.1080/13698579908407017

DO - 10.1080/13698579908407017

M3 - Journal article

VL - 1

SP - 179

EP - 194

JO - Health, Risk and Society

JF - Health, Risk and Society

SN - 1369-8575

IS - 2

ER -