Documenting Women’s Postoperative Bodies: Knowing Stephanie and “Remembering Stephanie” as Collaborative Cancer Narratives

Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 11 (4):445-454 (2014)
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Abstract

Photographic representations of women living with or beyond breast cancer have gained prominence in recent decades. Postmillennial visual narratives are both documentary projects and dialogic sites of self-construction and reader-viewer witness. After a brief overview of 30 years of breast cancer photography, this essay analyzes a collaborative photo-documentary by Stephanie Byram and Charlee Brodsky, Knowing Stephanie , and a memorial photographic essay by Brodsky written ten years after Byram’s death, “Remembering Stephanie” . The ethics of representing women’s postsurgical bodies and opportunities for reader-viewers to engage in “productive looking” are the focal issues under consideration

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References found in this work

On Photography.Susan Sontag - 1978 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 36 (4):514-515.
Remembering Stephanie.C. Brodsky - 2015 - Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 12 (1):33-49.

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