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Trial by mountain: Suffering and healing in difficult landscapes.

机译:山区审判:在艰难的风景中遭受痛苦和康复。

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摘要

This dissertation addresses the intersection of illness and landscape in metaphors of climbing mountains and cancer. In recovery climbs, events held to raise money and awareness for women's cancers, climbing mountain peaks and summits figures as a journey similar to a struggle with cancer. For these metaphors to be intelligible as healing and hopeful requires the Euro-American histories of investing in mountains as wild, consecrated, risky places.;To understand the development of recovery climbs, which began in the late 1990s, I first contextualize Western women's climbing within a larger mountaineering history in which men are the dominant players. By paying attention to the gendered dimensions of mountaineering beginning in the nineteenth century but focusing on the last several decades, I describe what kinds of shifts have taken place in the last 30 years to make recovery climbs possible. I then describe the development of wilderness therapy in the 1990s. A feminist and still-growing therapeutic model, wilderness therapy creates what I call a slow wilderness, in which risk is made manageable and contained, and fast and risky aesthetics, coded as masculine, are traded for ecofeminist tropes of mutuality, nurturing, and femininity.;These climbing practices go beyond metaphor. I argue that recovery climbers actively make permeable bodies and landscapes through their interactions. I examine several different models of contemporary cancer activism to argue that these different organizations' embodied practices matter and create ecologies, some of which are more life-sustaining, just, and productive for understanding illness than others.;Finally, I follow events organized by The Breast Cancer Fund and The HERA Women's Cancer Foundation to explore the ways that metaphors of rocks and climbing inform people's experiences of cancer and trauma. I use lines, problems, horizons, and pressure as tropes that provide a materially embodied way of engaging cancer climbs. My phenomenological account, informed by queer theory, argues that recovery climbs are embodied practices of resilience and interrelation. I propose oncogeographies as a different ecological model in which we might better relate to illness by working with the limits and obstacles that illness brings, rather than repudiating them in favor of survivorship narratives.
机译:本文以登山和癌症的隐喻来探讨疾病与景观的交集。在恢复攀登中,举行了各种活动来筹集资金和提高对女性癌症的认识,攀登高山峰顶和峰顶的旅程类似于与癌症作斗争的旅程。为了使这些隐喻​​可理解为康复和希望,需要欧美历史上在荒野,神圣,危险的地方投资山区;为了了解始于1990年代后期的恢复攀登的发展,我首先将西方女性的攀登背景化在更大的登山历史中,男人是主导者。通过关注始于19世纪的登山的性别差异,但关注过去的几十年,我描述了过去30年中发生了哪些转变,以使恢复攀登成为可能。然后,我描述了1990年代荒野疗法的发展。荒野疗法是一种女性主义且仍在发展的治疗模式,创造了我所谓的慢旷野,在这种荒野中,风险可以控制并得到控制,而快速和冒险的美学(被称为男性)被换成了相互之间的生态女性主义,养育和女性化的比喻。 。;这些攀岩手法超越了隐喻。我认为恢复登山者可以通过他们的互动来积极制作可渗透的物体和景观。我研究了当代癌症行动主义的几种不同模型,认为这些不同组织的具体实践很重要并创造了生态学,其中一些生态系统比其他组织更能维持生命,公正并更有效率地理解疾病;最后,我关注由乳腺癌基金会和HERA妇女癌症基金会研究了岩石隐喻和攀岩隐喻如何告知人们癌症和创伤经历的方法。我使用线条,问题,视野和压力作为比喻来提供实质性的参与癌症攀爬的方式。我的现象学解释是在酷儿理论的指导下进行的,认为恢复爬升是复原力和相互关系的体现。我提议将地形学作为一种不同的生态模型,在这种生态学模型中,我们可以通过应对疾病带来的限制和障碍来更好地与疾病相关,而不是摒弃它们以求助于生存叙事。

著录项

  • 作者

    Collins, Lindsey.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Santa Cruz.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Santa Cruz.;
  • 学科 American Studies.;Literature General.;Gender Studies.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2012
  • 页码 229 p.
  • 总页数 229
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:43:36

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