The Traces of Cancer: A Metaphorical Understanding of the Experiences of Women Living Beyond Breast Cancer

This study feeds into ongoing discussions on the metaphors used by cancer patients. Its aim is to explore how women living with a history of breast cancer use metaphors to express and interpret the experience of cancer remission. Data were collected in interviews designed to capture a rich and metap...

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Veröffentlicht in:Qualitative health research 2024-08, p.10497323241242054
Hauptverfasser: Guité-Verret, Alexandra, Vachon, Mélanie
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study feeds into ongoing discussions on the metaphors used by cancer patients. Its aim is to explore how women living with a history of breast cancer use metaphors to express and interpret the experience of cancer remission. Data were collected in interviews designed to capture a rich and metaphorical description of participants' experiences with breast cancer and what these experiences mean to them. Ten participants were recruited. An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the participants' narratives highlighted a central metaphor: the cancer trace in one's life. The participants had to adapt to four specific traces of cancer: (1) the identity trace, (2) the existential trace, (3) the bodily trace, and (4) the narrative trace. We discuss how cancer challenges one's sense of biographical continuity and initiates a search for a new way of being. We also discuss how the metaphor of the trace differs from the metaphor of the cancer hero living without any trace of cancer.
ISSN:1049-7323
1552-7557
DOI:10.1177/10497323241242054