Prostate cancer is a uniquely problematic male health issue. Findings from a study employing an ethnographic approach are presented to describe the ways in which 14 men's lives were changed as a result of this experience. The theoretical basis of the study centered on embodiment to explore the personal impact of prostate cancer, its treatment, and its side effects. The findings suggest that cancer was experienced sequentially, beginning at the time of diagnosis with the problematizing of the normally “silent” male body. This trajectory of experience progressed to emphasize the importance placed on treatment side effects, embodied vulnerability, and the impact of the cancer on men's “embodied” lives. In this article, I focus on the final pha...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
While some argue that gender differences, which refer to the social classification into 'masculine' ...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Appleton, L., Wyatt, D., Perkins, E., Pa...
Prostate cancer is a uniquely problematic male health issue. Findings from a study employing an ethn...
Prostate cancer is a uniquely problematic male health issue. Findings from a study employing an ethn...
Prostate cancer is a uniquely problematic male health issue. Findings from a study employing an ethn...
Goals This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study explorin...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
While some argue that gender differences, which refer to the social classification into 'masculine' ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
While some argue that gender differences, which refer to the social classification into 'masculine' ...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Appleton, L., Wyatt, D., Perkins, E., Pa...
Prostate cancer is a uniquely problematic male health issue. Findings from a study employing an ethn...
Prostate cancer is a uniquely problematic male health issue. Findings from a study employing an ethn...
Prostate cancer is a uniquely problematic male health issue. Findings from a study employing an ethn...
Goals This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study explorin...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
While some argue that gender differences, which refer to the social classification into 'masculine' ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
This paper is one of five interrelated papers about cancer, drawn from a larger study exploring the ...
While some argue that gender differences, which refer to the social classification into 'masculine' ...
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Appleton, L., Wyatt, D., Perkins, E., Pa...