In this article I take as my point of departure a puzzle presented by a woman who had an apparently ‘bizarre’ reaction to a breast cancer diagnosis. In the clinic, she had exclaimed: “I would rather die than lose the breast!”. My aim is to unpack layers in this woman’s embodied and enculturated experience, with a view towards developing a psychosocial interpretation of breast cancer biography. The single case on which the present study is based, was extracted from a larger longitudinal data set which allowed me to follow ‘Ella’s’ transition from diagnosis to survivorship. I relied on five sources of data to unfold the case: two participant-generated texts (expressive writing and a Breast Biography), two interviews, and my own field notes. T...
The purpose of this existential-phenomenological study was to understand the meaning of the breast c...
This study provides insight into the phenomenon of coping, revealing detailed information outlining ...
This article represents one facet of the author’s research on women’s experiences of embodi-ment aft...
In this article I take as my point of departure a puzzle presented by a woman who had an apparently ...
This article exemplifies research on the subjective life experiences of women with breast cancer, de...
This research explores women’s experiences of arm morbidity after breast cancer. Biomedical knowled...
Cancer is a radical confrontation with the finitude of human being. The aim of our research is to u...
The focus on cancer rehabilitation has increased, but breast cancer patients still report unmet reha...
Qualitative research methodology (drawing on the psychoanalytic interview method and metapsychology)...
The focus on cancer rehabilitation has increased, but breast cancer patients still report unmet reha...
Thesis advisor: Pamela J. GracePurpose/Specific Aims: Van Manen’s hermeneutic phenomenological metho...
The specific aim of the study was to gain an understanding of the meaning of the everyday experience...
A diagnosis of breast cancer is considered a potential traumatic event associated with physical and ...
Abstract from short.pdf file.Dissertation supervisor: Srirupa Prasad.Includes vita.Pink ribbon cultu...
Picasso’s Woman: A Breast Cancer Story (1994) and Ordinary Life: A Memoir of Illness (1997) tell of ...
The purpose of this existential-phenomenological study was to understand the meaning of the breast c...
This study provides insight into the phenomenon of coping, revealing detailed information outlining ...
This article represents one facet of the author’s research on women’s experiences of embodi-ment aft...
In this article I take as my point of departure a puzzle presented by a woman who had an apparently ...
This article exemplifies research on the subjective life experiences of women with breast cancer, de...
This research explores women’s experiences of arm morbidity after breast cancer. Biomedical knowled...
Cancer is a radical confrontation with the finitude of human being. The aim of our research is to u...
The focus on cancer rehabilitation has increased, but breast cancer patients still report unmet reha...
Qualitative research methodology (drawing on the psychoanalytic interview method and metapsychology)...
The focus on cancer rehabilitation has increased, but breast cancer patients still report unmet reha...
Thesis advisor: Pamela J. GracePurpose/Specific Aims: Van Manen’s hermeneutic phenomenological metho...
The specific aim of the study was to gain an understanding of the meaning of the everyday experience...
A diagnosis of breast cancer is considered a potential traumatic event associated with physical and ...
Abstract from short.pdf file.Dissertation supervisor: Srirupa Prasad.Includes vita.Pink ribbon cultu...
Picasso’s Woman: A Breast Cancer Story (1994) and Ordinary Life: A Memoir of Illness (1997) tell of ...
The purpose of this existential-phenomenological study was to understand the meaning of the breast c...
This study provides insight into the phenomenon of coping, revealing detailed information outlining ...
This article represents one facet of the author’s research on women’s experiences of embodi-ment aft...