As treatments have advanced, metastatic breast cancer has become a disease that some women can live with for years, which has changed the language that women use to discuss living with this form of breast cancer as discussed in this book.
Using the framework of Celeste Condit's rhetorical formations, which includes uses of metaphors, topics, and values, among other rhetorical features, the author examines how language has shifted from one of war and survivor rhetoric to that of metavivor rhetoric, which includes metaphors of water and prison, among others. Another hallmark of this emerging rhetorical formation is existing in a state of liminality where the cancer neither progresses nor retreats, leading to women experiencing time differently. By examining how women discuss living with cancer in an online breast cancer support group, the author analyzes the language shifts taking place and argues that women have moved from the dominant war/survivor rhetorical formation to one grounded in metavivor rhetoric.
Within this evolution comes an understanding of what it means to live with a chronic, yet ultimately, terminal, illness and an acknowledgment of the impact that their lives' perceived time has on these language choices.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Metavivors are people living with-and dying from-metastatic breast cancer. Metaphors of war and survival, still dominant in breast-cancer discourse, are, if they are useful to anyone, not, in general, useful to them. Indeed, they may be harmful. Mengert engages with these metaphors, and, with nuance and care, goes beyond them to explore questions of breast-cancer rhetoric more broadly-what it is and what it can be: When, as happens increasingly, cancer becomes a chronic illness, how do we speak of it and why does that matter? * Judy Z. Segal, Professor Emerita, University of British Columbia, Canada *
Reihe
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Zielgruppe
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-6669-7310-5 (9781666973105)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Julie Mengert is Collegiate Assistant Professor at Virginia Tech.
1. The Rhetoric of Metastatic Breast Cancer
2. A Theory and Methodology of Rhetorical Formations in an Online Message Board
3. The Dominant Rhetorical Formation in Breast Cancer Discourse: War Rhetoric
4. . 'I Guess I'll Never Be a Survivor': The Existing Rhetorical Formation for Metastatic Breast Cancer
5. From Surviving to Metaviving: Confronting Mortality through Breast Cancer
Rhetoric
6. Promoting Rhetorical Changes for Women with Metastatic Breast Cancer
Appendix
Works Cited
About the Author