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Vividly showcasing diverse voices and experiences, this book illuminates an all-too-common experience by exploring how women respond to a diagnosis of breast cancer. Drawing from interviews in which women describe their journeys from diagnosis through treatment and recovery, Julia A. Ericksen explores topics ranging from women's trust in their doctors to their feelings about appearance and sexuality. She includes the experiences of women who do not put their faith in traditional medicine as well as those who do, and she takes a look at the long-term consequences of this disease. What emerges from her powerful and often moving account is a compelling picture of how cultural messages about breast cancer shape women's ideas about their illness, how breast cancer affects their relationships with friends and family, why some of them become activists, and more. Ericksen, herself a breast cancer survivor, has written an accessible book that reveals much about the ways in which we narrate our illnesses and about how these narratives shape the paths we travel once diagnosed.
Breast --- Breasts --- Chest --- Large-breasted women --- Cancer --- Psychological aspects. --- Patients --- Breast - Cancer - Psychological aspects. --- appearance. --- breast cancer activism. --- breast cancer education. --- breast cancer support. --- breast cancer survivor. --- breast cancer. --- breast surgery. --- cancer activism. --- cancer recovery. --- cancer treatment. --- cancer. --- cultural studies. --- diagnosis. --- disease. --- doctors orders. --- doctors. --- dying. --- ethnography. --- faith. --- gender studies. --- illness. --- medicine. --- micro sociology. --- patients and doctors. --- personal experience. --- personal illness. --- politics. --- sexuality. --- sociology. --- treatment. --- women and cancer. --- women.
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Sex customs --- Sexology --- Sexual behavior surveys --- History --- ro: with --- Sex
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Click here to listen to Julia Ericksen's interview about Dance with Me on Philadelphia NPR's "Radio Times" Rumba music starts and a floor full of dancers alternate clinging to one another and turning away. Rumba is an erotic dance, and the mood is hot and heavy; the women bend and hyperextend their legs as they twist and turn around their partners. Amateur and professional ballroom dancers alike compete in a highly gendered display of intimacy, romance and sexual passion. In Dance With Me, Julia Ericksen, a competitive ballroom dancer herself, takes the reader onto the competition floor and into the lights and the glamour of a world of tanned bodies and glittering attire, exploring the allure of this hyper-competitive, difficult, and often expensive activity. In a vivid ethnography accompanied by beautiful photographs of all levels of dancers, from the world’s top competitors to social dancers, Ericksen examines the ways emotional labor is used to create intimacy between professional partners and between professionals and their students, illustrating how dancers purchase intimacy. She shows that, while at first glance, ballroom presents a highly gendered face with men leading and women following, dancing also transgresses gender.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / General --- Ballroom dancing --- Ball room dancing --- Social dancing --- Dance --- Social aspects.
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Sexology --- Sex customs --- Sexual behavior surveys --- History
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