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The Topic of Cancer
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The Topic of Cancer

The Topic of Cancer

ByJonathan Burke
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2013
eBook Published 1 May 2018
Pub. location London
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780429483462
Pages 256 pages
eBook ISBN 9780429908231
SubjectsBehavioral Sciences
KeywordsPalliative Care, Breast Cancer, Cancer Journey, National Health Services, Cancer Care
Get Citation

Get Citation

Burke, J. (2013). The Topic of Cancer. London: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429483462
ABOUT THIS BOOK

This book focuses on our emotional responses to cancer by offering a range of perspectives: psychoanalytic, medical, spiritual and religious, as well as literary. Once suppressed, akin to a taboo, the topic of cancer is now very much in the public consciousness. The prevalence of the disease and well-publicised medical advances in its treatment demand it.

Topic of Cancer begins with Freud's cancer, widely known of but rarely understood in its historic and analytic context. Psychotherapeutic reflections are then offered on our understanding of the adult and adolescent with cancer, and the challenges of sustaining a thoughtful presence in the face of the trauma experienced when a child is diagnosed with cancer, and during treatment. The dilemmas and challenges faced by today's psychotherapist with cancer are explored next and, for the first time in cancer literature, an account of the emotional demands on nurses involved in sensitive, intimate care. With an increasing number of people living longer with cancer, “survivorship” and palliative care are the focus of the chapters that follow.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|156 pages
Bearing the Unbearable
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter One|24 pages
Freud’s cancer
ByMartin Schmidt
View abstract
chapter Two|22 pages
Understanding the patient with cancer *
ByDorothy Judd
View abstract
chapter Three|16 pages
The emotional impact of cancer on children and their families *
ByAnthony Lee, Jane Elfer
View abstract
chapter Four|11 pages
What the illness may reveal
ByJohn Woods
View abstract
chapter Five|16 pages
The ill psychotherapist: a wounded healer
ByJudy Parkinson
View abstract
chapter Six|15 pages
The cancer nurse specialists’ caseload: “contending with the fretful elements”
ByAnne Lanceley
View abstract
chapter Seven|15 pages
On survivorship
ByAdrian Tookman, Faye Gishen, Jane Eades
View abstract
chapter Eight|15 pages
Palliative care: what, when, and how? *
ByRobert Twycross
View abstract
chapter Nine|16 pages
The nature of religious/spiritual concerns in addressing the psychological needs of people with cancer
ByJonathan Wittenberg
View abstract
part II|45 pages
Containment and Creativity
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter Ten|17 pages
Finding creative expression *
ByCarole Satyamurti
View abstract
chapter Eleven|25 pages
The cancer memoir: in search of a writing cure?
ByAnne Karpf
View abstract

This book focuses on our emotional responses to cancer by offering a range of perspectives: psychoanalytic, medical, spiritual and religious, as well as literary. Once suppressed, akin to a taboo, the topic of cancer is now very much in the public consciousness. The prevalence of the disease and well-publicised medical advances in its treatment demand it.

Topic of Cancer begins with Freud's cancer, widely known of but rarely understood in its historic and analytic context. Psychotherapeutic reflections are then offered on our understanding of the adult and adolescent with cancer, and the challenges of sustaining a thoughtful presence in the face of the trauma experienced when a child is diagnosed with cancer, and during treatment. The dilemmas and challenges faced by today's psychotherapist with cancer are explored next and, for the first time in cancer literature, an account of the emotional demands on nurses involved in sensitive, intimate care. With an increasing number of people living longer with cancer, “survivorship” and palliative care are the focus of the chapters that follow.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|156 pages
Bearing the Unbearable
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter One|24 pages
Freud’s cancer
ByMartin Schmidt
View abstract
chapter Two|22 pages
Understanding the patient with cancer *
ByDorothy Judd
View abstract
chapter Three|16 pages
The emotional impact of cancer on children and their families *
ByAnthony Lee, Jane Elfer
View abstract
chapter Four|11 pages
What the illness may reveal
ByJohn Woods
View abstract
chapter Five|16 pages
The ill psychotherapist: a wounded healer
ByJudy Parkinson
View abstract
chapter Six|15 pages
The cancer nurse specialists’ caseload: “contending with the fretful elements”
ByAnne Lanceley
View abstract
chapter Seven|15 pages
On survivorship
ByAdrian Tookman, Faye Gishen, Jane Eades
View abstract
chapter Eight|15 pages
Palliative care: what, when, and how? *
ByRobert Twycross
View abstract
chapter Nine|16 pages
The nature of religious/spiritual concerns in addressing the psychological needs of people with cancer
ByJonathan Wittenberg
View abstract
part II|45 pages
Containment and Creativity
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter Ten|17 pages
Finding creative expression *
ByCarole Satyamurti
View abstract
chapter Eleven|25 pages
The cancer memoir: in search of a writing cure?
ByAnne Karpf
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

This book focuses on our emotional responses to cancer by offering a range of perspectives: psychoanalytic, medical, spiritual and religious, as well as literary. Once suppressed, akin to a taboo, the topic of cancer is now very much in the public consciousness. The prevalence of the disease and well-publicised medical advances in its treatment demand it.

Topic of Cancer begins with Freud's cancer, widely known of but rarely understood in its historic and analytic context. Psychotherapeutic reflections are then offered on our understanding of the adult and adolescent with cancer, and the challenges of sustaining a thoughtful presence in the face of the trauma experienced when a child is diagnosed with cancer, and during treatment. The dilemmas and challenges faced by today's psychotherapist with cancer are explored next and, for the first time in cancer literature, an account of the emotional demands on nurses involved in sensitive, intimate care. With an increasing number of people living longer with cancer, “survivorship” and palliative care are the focus of the chapters that follow.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|156 pages
Bearing the Unbearable
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter One|24 pages
Freud’s cancer
ByMartin Schmidt
View abstract
chapter Two|22 pages
Understanding the patient with cancer *
ByDorothy Judd
View abstract
chapter Three|16 pages
The emotional impact of cancer on children and their families *
ByAnthony Lee, Jane Elfer
View abstract
chapter Four|11 pages
What the illness may reveal
ByJohn Woods
View abstract
chapter Five|16 pages
The ill psychotherapist: a wounded healer
ByJudy Parkinson
View abstract
chapter Six|15 pages
The cancer nurse specialists’ caseload: “contending with the fretful elements”
ByAnne Lanceley
View abstract
chapter Seven|15 pages
On survivorship
ByAdrian Tookman, Faye Gishen, Jane Eades
View abstract
chapter Eight|15 pages
Palliative care: what, when, and how? *
ByRobert Twycross
View abstract
chapter Nine|16 pages
The nature of religious/spiritual concerns in addressing the psychological needs of people with cancer
ByJonathan Wittenberg
View abstract
part II|45 pages
Containment and Creativity
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter Ten|17 pages
Finding creative expression *
ByCarole Satyamurti
View abstract
chapter Eleven|25 pages
The cancer memoir: in search of a writing cure?
ByAnne Karpf
View abstract

This book focuses on our emotional responses to cancer by offering a range of perspectives: psychoanalytic, medical, spiritual and religious, as well as literary. Once suppressed, akin to a taboo, the topic of cancer is now very much in the public consciousness. The prevalence of the disease and well-publicised medical advances in its treatment demand it.

Topic of Cancer begins with Freud's cancer, widely known of but rarely understood in its historic and analytic context. Psychotherapeutic reflections are then offered on our understanding of the adult and adolescent with cancer, and the challenges of sustaining a thoughtful presence in the face of the trauma experienced when a child is diagnosed with cancer, and during treatment. The dilemmas and challenges faced by today's psychotherapist with cancer are explored next and, for the first time in cancer literature, an account of the emotional demands on nurses involved in sensitive, intimate care. With an increasing number of people living longer with cancer, “survivorship” and palliative care are the focus of the chapters that follow.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|156 pages
Bearing the Unbearable
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter One|24 pages
Freud’s cancer
ByMartin Schmidt
View abstract
chapter Two|22 pages
Understanding the patient with cancer *
ByDorothy Judd
View abstract
chapter Three|16 pages
The emotional impact of cancer on children and their families *
ByAnthony Lee, Jane Elfer
View abstract
chapter Four|11 pages
What the illness may reveal
ByJohn Woods
View abstract
chapter Five|16 pages
The ill psychotherapist: a wounded healer
ByJudy Parkinson
View abstract
chapter Six|15 pages
The cancer nurse specialists’ caseload: “contending with the fretful elements”
ByAnne Lanceley
View abstract
chapter Seven|15 pages
On survivorship
ByAdrian Tookman, Faye Gishen, Jane Eades
View abstract
chapter Eight|15 pages
Palliative care: what, when, and how? *
ByRobert Twycross
View abstract
chapter Nine|16 pages
The nature of religious/spiritual concerns in addressing the psychological needs of people with cancer
ByJonathan Wittenberg
View abstract
part II|45 pages
Containment and Creativity
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter Ten|17 pages
Finding creative expression *
ByCarole Satyamurti
View abstract
chapter Eleven|25 pages
The cancer memoir: in search of a writing cure?
ByAnne Karpf
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

This book focuses on our emotional responses to cancer by offering a range of perspectives: psychoanalytic, medical, spiritual and religious, as well as literary. Once suppressed, akin to a taboo, the topic of cancer is now very much in the public consciousness. The prevalence of the disease and well-publicised medical advances in its treatment demand it.

Topic of Cancer begins with Freud's cancer, widely known of but rarely understood in its historic and analytic context. Psychotherapeutic reflections are then offered on our understanding of the adult and adolescent with cancer, and the challenges of sustaining a thoughtful presence in the face of the trauma experienced when a child is diagnosed with cancer, and during treatment. The dilemmas and challenges faced by today's psychotherapist with cancer are explored next and, for the first time in cancer literature, an account of the emotional demands on nurses involved in sensitive, intimate care. With an increasing number of people living longer with cancer, “survivorship” and palliative care are the focus of the chapters that follow.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|156 pages
Bearing the Unbearable
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter One|24 pages
Freud’s cancer
ByMartin Schmidt
View abstract
chapter Two|22 pages
Understanding the patient with cancer *
ByDorothy Judd
View abstract
chapter Three|16 pages
The emotional impact of cancer on children and their families *
ByAnthony Lee, Jane Elfer
View abstract
chapter Four|11 pages
What the illness may reveal
ByJohn Woods
View abstract
chapter Five|16 pages
The ill psychotherapist: a wounded healer
ByJudy Parkinson
View abstract
chapter Six|15 pages
The cancer nurse specialists’ caseload: “contending with the fretful elements”
ByAnne Lanceley
View abstract
chapter Seven|15 pages
On survivorship
ByAdrian Tookman, Faye Gishen, Jane Eades
View abstract
chapter Eight|15 pages
Palliative care: what, when, and how? *
ByRobert Twycross
View abstract
chapter Nine|16 pages
The nature of religious/spiritual concerns in addressing the psychological needs of people with cancer
ByJonathan Wittenberg
View abstract
part II|45 pages
Containment and Creativity
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter Ten|17 pages
Finding creative expression *
ByCarole Satyamurti
View abstract
chapter Eleven|25 pages
The cancer memoir: in search of a writing cure?
ByAnne Karpf
View abstract

This book focuses on our emotional responses to cancer by offering a range of perspectives: psychoanalytic, medical, spiritual and religious, as well as literary. Once suppressed, akin to a taboo, the topic of cancer is now very much in the public consciousness. The prevalence of the disease and well-publicised medical advances in its treatment demand it.

Topic of Cancer begins with Freud's cancer, widely known of but rarely understood in its historic and analytic context. Psychotherapeutic reflections are then offered on our understanding of the adult and adolescent with cancer, and the challenges of sustaining a thoughtful presence in the face of the trauma experienced when a child is diagnosed with cancer, and during treatment. The dilemmas and challenges faced by today's psychotherapist with cancer are explored next and, for the first time in cancer literature, an account of the emotional demands on nurses involved in sensitive, intimate care. With an increasing number of people living longer with cancer, “survivorship” and palliative care are the focus of the chapters that follow.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|156 pages
Bearing the Unbearable
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter One|24 pages
Freud’s cancer
ByMartin Schmidt
View abstract
chapter Two|22 pages
Understanding the patient with cancer *
ByDorothy Judd
View abstract
chapter Three|16 pages
The emotional impact of cancer on children and their families *
ByAnthony Lee, Jane Elfer
View abstract
chapter Four|11 pages
What the illness may reveal
ByJohn Woods
View abstract
chapter Five|16 pages
The ill psychotherapist: a wounded healer
ByJudy Parkinson
View abstract
chapter Six|15 pages
The cancer nurse specialists’ caseload: “contending with the fretful elements”
ByAnne Lanceley
View abstract
chapter Seven|15 pages
On survivorship
ByAdrian Tookman, Faye Gishen, Jane Eades
View abstract
chapter Eight|15 pages
Palliative care: what, when, and how? *
ByRobert Twycross
View abstract
chapter Nine|16 pages
The nature of religious/spiritual concerns in addressing the psychological needs of people with cancer
ByJonathan Wittenberg
View abstract
part II|45 pages
Containment and Creativity
ByJonathan Burke, Brett Kahr
chapter Ten|17 pages
Finding creative expression *
ByCarole Satyamurti
View abstract
chapter Eleven|25 pages
The cancer memoir: in search of a writing cure?
ByAnne Karpf
View abstract
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