Women in 'morte-cor': the objects that make and unmake a body with metastatic cancer

Authors

  • Susana de Noronha Antropóloga. Doutorada em Sociologia da Cultura. Bolseira de Investigação da Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia. Investigadora de Pós-Doutoramento. Centro de Estudos Sociais da Universidade de Coimbra. Coimbra, Portugal.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25758/set.874

Keywords:

Objects, Cancer, Women, Death, Modular-disease, Nosobuilt-in objects, Third half of things and of knowledge

Abstract

This paper presents a synopsis of the last chapter of my Ph.D. Thesis – Objects Made of Cancer: material culture as a piece of disease on women's art stories. Bringing together objects and materialities that take form and gain relevance in artistic projects regarding the feminine experience of cancer, this research proposes alternative concepts of material culture and oncological disease. It rejects a separation or differentiation between material and intangible dimensions in disease, understanding objects of material culture as portions of cancer, that is, as constitutive parts of the ideas, sensations, emotions, and gestures that make the experience of the diseased body. Medical, domestic and personal objects, of collective or individual use, that include disposable materialities, clothing, furniture, equipment, and machines, compose a list of realities that are embedded in the experience of the body during diagnosis, treatment, reconstruction, remission, recurrence, metastization and death. Giving a name to this continuity, my thesis proposes the concepts of “modular-disease” and “nosobuilt-in objects”, intending, in the way it defines things, the same connections that exist in lived reality. To understand the actions uses, and meanings given to the objects that are and make portions of cancer(s), the working field of this investigation assembled the images and written explanations of one hundred and fifty artistic projects made by or with women living the experience of this disease. Displayed on the Internet, professional or amateur, creative exercises of commercial and artistic photography, painting, drawing, collage, casting, sculpture, embroidery, and knitting make the visual and narrative ground that allows us to find the emic version of the mixture between material culture and disease. Perceiving the continuity that exists between objects and cancer, gathering knowledge given by the body, by art and social science, rests on a theoretic and methodological approach with which I tested the heuristic potential of what I call the 'third half of things and of knowledge'.

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References

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Published

2013-11-30

How to Cite

Women in ’morte-cor’: the objects that make and unmake a body with metastatic cancer. (2013). Saúde & Tecnologia, Suplemento, e33-e37. https://doi.org/10.25758/set.874