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Writing from breast cancer patients' lives: the erotic significance of the lived nipple

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Writing from breast cancer patients' lives: the erotic significance of the lived nipple. / Porroche-Escudero, Ana.
The Erotic in Context. Inter-Disciplinary Press. Oxford: Inter-disciplinary Press, 2011. p. 25-36.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

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Vancouver

Porroche-Escudero A. Writing from breast cancer patients' lives: the erotic significance of the lived nipple. In The Erotic in Context. Inter-Disciplinary Press. Oxford: Inter-disciplinary Press. 2011. p. 25-36

Author

Porroche-Escudero, Ana. / Writing from breast cancer patients' lives : the erotic significance of the lived nipple. The Erotic in Context. Inter-Disciplinary Press. Oxford : Inter-disciplinary Press, 2011. pp. 25-36

Bibtex

@inbook{bb3b024c0c724d33961ae2e441451ef8,
title = "Writing from breast cancer patients' lives: the erotic significance of the lived nipple",
abstract = "I suggest that the (absent) nipple in the breast cancer discourse provides a powerful lens magnifying the social construction of the erotic breast based on the commodification of breasts as mens objects of sexual pleasure. The world of cosmetic surgery has turned more and more attention to nipple loss as the primary factor affecting breast cancer patients feeling less sexually attractive, very much like biomedicine emphazing the severe impact of breast loss on womens sexuality. Indeed, the banner look good, feel better has been heavily marketed to promote enhancing technologies (i.e. breast and nipple reconstruction) as a panacea for womens (mental) sexual problems. However, little attention has been given to the breasts and nipples focusing on womens erotic and sexual embodied experiences. The focus of this paper will be on the erotic lived nipple as a source of incommensurable pleasure, sexual excitement, joy and even orgasm for women, but also pain, alienation, disappointment and sadness when mastectomy removes them, and the promise of magical cosmetic surgery cannot restore their erotic experience. This paper is based on a case study of an informant during my PhD fieldwork in Spain during 2007-2008. Federico, partner of a breast cancer patient, takes up the idea of the lived breasts to give an alternative understanding of the erotic breast. He depicts his partner as a woman who delighted herself in the pleasure of her nipples being rubbed, caressed, squeezed and sucked to the point of orgasm. Thus, the lost of the lived breast will be emphatically mourned as a castration of his partners key sexual and erotic body part. Federicos account further raises the questions as to who defines eroticism and for whom breasts should be erotic.",
keywords = "breast cancer, embodiment, women's health, sexuality, pleasure, nippleism, breast reconstruction, Spain",
author = "Ana Porroche-Escudero",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
pages = "25--36",
booktitle = "The Erotic in Context. Inter-Disciplinary Press",
publisher = "Inter-disciplinary Press",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Writing from breast cancer patients' lives

T2 - the erotic significance of the lived nipple

AU - Porroche-Escudero, Ana

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - I suggest that the (absent) nipple in the breast cancer discourse provides a powerful lens magnifying the social construction of the erotic breast based on the commodification of breasts as mens objects of sexual pleasure. The world of cosmetic surgery has turned more and more attention to nipple loss as the primary factor affecting breast cancer patients feeling less sexually attractive, very much like biomedicine emphazing the severe impact of breast loss on womens sexuality. Indeed, the banner look good, feel better has been heavily marketed to promote enhancing technologies (i.e. breast and nipple reconstruction) as a panacea for womens (mental) sexual problems. However, little attention has been given to the breasts and nipples focusing on womens erotic and sexual embodied experiences. The focus of this paper will be on the erotic lived nipple as a source of incommensurable pleasure, sexual excitement, joy and even orgasm for women, but also pain, alienation, disappointment and sadness when mastectomy removes them, and the promise of magical cosmetic surgery cannot restore their erotic experience. This paper is based on a case study of an informant during my PhD fieldwork in Spain during 2007-2008. Federico, partner of a breast cancer patient, takes up the idea of the lived breasts to give an alternative understanding of the erotic breast. He depicts his partner as a woman who delighted herself in the pleasure of her nipples being rubbed, caressed, squeezed and sucked to the point of orgasm. Thus, the lost of the lived breast will be emphatically mourned as a castration of his partners key sexual and erotic body part. Federicos account further raises the questions as to who defines eroticism and for whom breasts should be erotic.

AB - I suggest that the (absent) nipple in the breast cancer discourse provides a powerful lens magnifying the social construction of the erotic breast based on the commodification of breasts as mens objects of sexual pleasure. The world of cosmetic surgery has turned more and more attention to nipple loss as the primary factor affecting breast cancer patients feeling less sexually attractive, very much like biomedicine emphazing the severe impact of breast loss on womens sexuality. Indeed, the banner look good, feel better has been heavily marketed to promote enhancing technologies (i.e. breast and nipple reconstruction) as a panacea for womens (mental) sexual problems. However, little attention has been given to the breasts and nipples focusing on womens erotic and sexual embodied experiences. The focus of this paper will be on the erotic lived nipple as a source of incommensurable pleasure, sexual excitement, joy and even orgasm for women, but also pain, alienation, disappointment and sadness when mastectomy removes them, and the promise of magical cosmetic surgery cannot restore their erotic experience. This paper is based on a case study of an informant during my PhD fieldwork in Spain during 2007-2008. Federico, partner of a breast cancer patient, takes up the idea of the lived breasts to give an alternative understanding of the erotic breast. He depicts his partner as a woman who delighted herself in the pleasure of her nipples being rubbed, caressed, squeezed and sucked to the point of orgasm. Thus, the lost of the lived breast will be emphatically mourned as a castration of his partners key sexual and erotic body part. Federicos account further raises the questions as to who defines eroticism and for whom breasts should be erotic.

KW - breast cancer

KW - embodiment

KW - women's health

KW - sexuality

KW - pleasure

KW - nippleism

KW - breast reconstruction

KW - Spain

M3 - Chapter

SP - 25

EP - 36

BT - The Erotic in Context. Inter-Disciplinary Press

PB - Inter-disciplinary Press

CY - Oxford

ER -