Centre for Social Research in Health, UNSW Sydney, Level 3 Goodsell Building F-20, Sydney, NSW, 2052, Australia.
Clinical Research Unit, The Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital, Cancer Care Services, Ground Floor Building 34, Herston, QLD, 4029, Australia.
Br J Sociol. 2019 Sep;70(4):1582-1601. doi: 10.1111/1468-4446.12616. Epub 2018 Nov 8.
Whether within an atmosphere of hope, or amidst relations of fear, the emotions of cancer are unavoidably collectively produced. Yet persistent individualistic paradigms continue to obscure how the emotions of cancer operate relationally - between bodies, subjects, discourses, and practices - and are intertwined with circulating beliefs, cultural desires, and various forms of normativity. Drawing on interviews with 80 people living with cancer in Australia, this paper illustrates why recognition of the collective enterprise of survivorship - and the collective production of emotion, more generally - is important in light of persistent, culturally dominant conceptions of the individual patient as the primary 'afflicted', 'feeling', and 'treated' subject. Building on previous work on affective relations and moral framings, we posit that the collective affects of survivorship inflect what people living with cancer can, and should, feel. We highlight how such things as hope, resignation, optimism, and dread are 'products' of the collective affects of cancer, with implications for how survivorship is lived, felt, and done.
无论是在充满希望的氛围中,还是在充满恐惧的关系中,癌症的情绪都是不可避免地共同产生的。然而,持续存在的个人主义范式继续掩盖了癌症的情绪是如何在关系中运作的——在身体、主体、话语和实践之间——以及与循环信仰、文化欲望和各种形式的规范性交织在一起的。本文通过对 80 名在澳大利亚生活的癌症患者的访谈,说明了为什么认识到生存的集体事业——以及更普遍的情感的集体产生——是重要的,因为人们一直认为个体患者是主要的“受影响者”、“感受者”和“治疗者”。基于先前关于情感关系和道德框架的研究,我们假设生存的集体影响影响着癌症患者的感受。我们强调了希望、顺从、乐观和恐惧等情绪是癌症集体影响的“产物”,这对生存的体验、感受和行为都有影响。