ABSTRACT

Women’s Health Advocacy brings together academic studies and personal narratives to demonstrate how women use a variety of arguments, forms of writing, and communication strategies to effect change in a health system that is not only often difficult to participate in, but which can be actively harmful. It explicates the concept of rhetorical ingenuity—the creation of rhetorical means for specific and technical, yet extremely personal, situations. At a time when women’s health concerns are at the center of national debate, this rhetorical ingenuity provides means for women to uncover latent sources of oppression in women’s health and medicine and to influence matters of research, funding, policy, and everyday access to healthcare in the face of exclusion and disenfranchisement. This accessible collection will be inspiring reading for academics and students in health communication, medical humanities, and women’s studies, as well as for activists, patients, and professionals.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

section 1|2 pages

Rhetorics of Self

chapter |3 pages

Advocate

chapter 1|11 pages

Writing My Body, Writing My Health

A Rhetorical Autoethnography

chapter 2|9 pages

Temporal Disruptions

Illness Narratives Before and After Web 2.0

chapter 3|11 pages

Analyzing PCOS Discourses

Strategies for Unpacking Chronic Illness and Taking Action

chapter 4|14 pages

Rhetorics of Empowerment for Managing Lupus Pain

Patient-to-Patient Knowledge Sharing in Online Health Forums

chapter 5|14 pages

Rhetorics of Self-Disclosure

A Feminist Framework for Infertility Activism

section 2|2 pages

Rhetorics of/and the Patient

chapter 6|13 pages

Making Bodies Matter

Norms and Excesses in the Well-Woman Visit

chapter 7|12 pages

Doula Advocacy

Strategies for Consent in Labor and Delivery

chapter 8|9 pages

Gendered Responsibility

A Critique of HPV Vaccine Advertisements, 2006–2016

chapter 9|11 pages

“Pregnant? You Need a Flu Shot!”

Safety and Danger in Medical Discourses of Maternal Immunization

chapter 10|11 pages

“Most Doctors Will Just Say ‘Stop running’”

Women Runners’ Narratives, Agency, and Identity

section 3|2 pages

Rhetorics of Advocacy

chapter |2 pages

Fighting Cancer From Every Angle

chapter 11|11 pages

Reframing Efficiency Through Usability

The Code and Baby-Friendly USA

chapter 12|15 pages

“You have to be your own advocate”

Patient Self-Advocacy as a Coping Mechanism for Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Risk

chapter 13|14 pages

Activism by Accuracy

Women’s Health and Hormonal Birth Control

chapter 14|14 pages

Altering Imaginaries and Demanding Treatment

Women’s AIDS Activism in Toronto, 1980s–1990s

chapter 15|13 pages

Costly Expedience

Reproductive Rights and Responses to Slut Shaming

chapter |9 pages

Afterword

“The Rhetorician [of Health and Medicine] as Agent of Social Change”: Activism for the Whole Woman’s Body