Springer, 2006. — 221 p. — ISBN 978-1-4020-4508-0.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Rosemarie Tong Negotiating Personal and Political Settlements with Breast Cancer: Women Finding Their Own Ways to Live with Human Contingency
Discourses of Breast Cancer: Who Speaks for Breast Cancer?Susan Sherwin Personalizing the Political: Negotiating the Feminist, Medical, Scientific, and Commercial Discourses Surrounding Breast Cancer
Barron Lerner Power, Gender, and Pizzazz: The Early Years of Breast Cancer Activism
Gwynne Gertz Breast Cancer: Dueling Discourses and the Persistence of an Outmoded Paradigm
Lisa Diedrich Doing Things with Ideas and Affects in the Illness Narratives Of Susan Sontag and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick
Narratives of Breast Cancer: Living with DiseaseAnita Ho The Breast Cancer Diaries
Debra Gold Breast Cancer: The Maternal Body Reflected in a Three-way Mirror
Leatha Kendrick Learn to Love What’s Left : Poems on Breast Cancer
Gail Weiss Death and the Other: Rethinking Authenticity
Breast Cancer as a Model in Clinical ResearchJohn S. Kovach Breast Cancer Research: A Political Cause and Paradigm for Scientific Inquiry
Loretta M. Kopelman Clinical Trials for Breast Cancer and Informed Consent: How Women Helped Make Research a Cooperative Venture
Anne Moyer and Marci Lobel The Role of Psychosocial Research in Understanding and Improving the Experience of Breast Cancer and Breast Cancer Risk
Breast Cancer in the ClassroomHelen Rodnite Lemay Teaching about Breast Cancer and “Common Health”
Tanfer Emin-Tunc Theoretical Considerations on “Reading” the Breast
Sofya Maslyanskaya Recent Developments in Breast Cancer Research