Artigo Revisado por pares

Pink Ribbon Pin-Ups: photographing femininity after breast cancer

2012; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 14; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/13691058.2012.690104

ISSN

1464-5351

Autores

Kaitlyn Regehr,

Tópico(s)

Art Therapy and Mental Health

Resumo

Many treatments for breast cancer are traumatic, invasive and harshly visible. In addition to physical trauma, breast cancer is often associated with a variety of psychosocial issues surrounding romantic relationships, sexuality and feminine identity. Pink Ribbon Pin-Ups was a pin-up girl calendar wherein all the models were women who were living with, or had survived, breast cancer. The project's purpose was to raise funds and awareness for breast cancer research and to create a space where survivors could explore and express their post-cancer sexuality. This study uses an observational approach, paired with semi-structured interviews, to explore the ways that breast cancer survivors perceive their post-cancer body and the subsequent impact on relationships and feminine identity. By examining contemporary discussions regarding breast cancer, body image and the objectification of women, it is concluded that although this photographic approach may be at odds with some modern breast cancer activism, it does appear to meet the expressed needs of a particular group of women living with the disease.

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