Reconfiguring time: optimisation and authenticity in accounts of people surviving with advanced cancer

被引:11
作者
Plage, Stefanie [1 ,2 ]
Kirby, Emma [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Queensland, Inst Social Sci Res ISSR, Brisbane, Qld, Australia
[2] Univ Queensland, ARC Ctr Excellence Children & Families Life Cours, Life Course Ctr, Brisbane, Qld, Australia
[3] Univ New South Wales, Ctr Social Res Hlth CSRH, Sydney, NSW, Australia
来源
HEALTH SOCIOLOGY REVIEW | 2022年 / 31卷 / 01期
基金
澳大利亚研究理事会;
关键词
Advanced cancer; narratives; lived experience; qualitative interviews; Australia; time;
D O I
10.1080/14461242.2021.1918016
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Increasingly, people live longer with advanced cancer, despite having no prospect of full recovery. Ongoing survival is owed to early detection and effective disease management, yet experienced as highly precarious. In this article we explore how cancer chronicity brings into effect a pre-occupation with time, what time is to people with advanced cancer, and what socio-cultural norms inflect everyday practices. We analyse 20 interviews conducted in Queensland, Australia with 11 participants with advanced cancer, to trace the intersections of what time means, what people do with time, and what time feels like. Drawing on scholarship on the moralities around ill health, we discuss how awareness of time emerges in cancer chronicity and raises moral questions on how to live well. Here, imperatives of optimisation (urging people with advanced cancer to make the most of limited time) intersect with imperatives of authenticity (marked by emphasis on how to live one's own best life). These dynamics reveal expressions of living with advanced cancer in morally viable ways. Such ontological processes have implications for the lived experience of people with advanced cancer, their families and oncological care.
引用
收藏
页码:96 / 111
页数:16
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