ABSTRACT

This book provides a contemporary and comprehensive examination of cancer in everyday life, drawing on qualitative research with people living with cancer, their family members and health professionals. It explores the evolving and enduring affects of cancer for individuals, families and communities, with attention to the changing dynamics of survivorship, including social relations around waiting, uncertainty, hope, wilfulness, obligation, responsibility and healing. Challenging simplistic deployments of survivorship and drawing on contemporary and classical social theory, it critically examines survivorship through innovative qualitative methodologies including interviews, focus groups, participant produced photos and solicited diaries. In assembling this panoramic view of cancer in the twenty-first century, it also enlivens core debates in sociology, including questions around individual agency, subjectivity, temporality, normativity, resistance, affect and embodiment. A thoughtful account of cancer embedded in the undulations of the everyday, narrated by its subjects and those who informally and formally care for them, Survivorship: A Sociology of Cancer in Everyday Life outlines new ways of thinking about survivorship for sociologists, health and medical researchers and those working in cancer care settings.

chapter |25 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|21 pages

Bodily Becomings

chapter 2|17 pages

Waiting, Hauntings and Surviving

chapter 3|18 pages

Malignant Attitudes

chapter 4|18 pages

Entangled and Estranged

chapter 5|19 pages

Collective Emotions, Affective Relations

chapter 6|17 pages

Enchantment, Acceleration and Innovation

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion