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Journal article

Balancing exercises: subjectivised narratives of balance in cancer self-health

Abstract:
Having a ‘balanced lifestyle’ is often promoted as one way to manage the competing demands of contemporary life. For people with cancer, those demands are often multiplied, particularly when they use self-health approaches that seek to bring together an array of biomedical and complementary and alternative medicine therapies and practices. Yet, how balance is used in this complex healthcare milieu and the affects it has on experiences of illness are less well understood. In order to follow the polyphonic narratives involved, two case studies of women with breast cancer who used cancer self-health approaches were analysed. By exploring different modes of subjectivation in the case studies, balance was found to affect experiences of health in contemporary society in multiple ways. In particular, it was one way through which participants saw themselves as being able to maintain a critical engagement not just with their healthcare, but with their self and life.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1177/1363459315622039

Authors


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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Primary Care Health Sciences
Role:
Author


Publisher:
SAGE Publications
Journal:
Health: an interdisciplinary journal for the social study of health, illness and medicine More from this journal
Volume:
20
Issue:
4
Pages:
329-345
Publication date:
2015-12-28
Acceptance date:
2015-11-20
DOI:
EISSN:
1461-7196
ISSN:
1461-7196


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:581057
UUID:
uuid:e34afe40-0dd7-412e-9e4e-cc2991609195
Local pid:
pubs:581057
Source identifiers:
581057
Deposit date:
2016-07-04

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