Documenting women's postoperative bodies: Knowing Stephanie and "Remembering Stephanie" as collaborative cancer narratives

J Bioeth Inq. 2014 Dec;11(4):445-54. doi: 10.1007/s11673-014-9582-8. Epub 2014 Oct 23.

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 (2003), and a memorial photographic essay by Brodsky written ten years after Byram's death, "Remembering Stephanie" (2014). The ethics of representing women's postsurgical bodies and opportunities for reader-viewers to engage in "productive looking" (Kaja Silverman's concept) are the focal issues under consideration.

MeSH terms

  • Body Image* / psychology
  • Breast Neoplasms / surgery*
  • Esthetics / psychology
  • Female
  • Feminism
  • Humans
  • Mammaplasty
  • Mastectomy, Modified Radical / psychology*
  • Narration*
  • Photography / ethics*
  • Photography / trends
  • Sexual Behavior
  • Writing*