Exploring Intimacy in Collaborative Photographic Narratives of Breast Cancer
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Breast Cancer Activism
3. Exploding into Life
Here grief, mourning and exaltation oscillate with one another. Each of these are followed by a new realisation: “I do not know what will survive from this strange new knowledge” (Lynch and Richards 1986, p. 60). The text and photography become spaces in which this knowledge can be formulated, shared and communicated. The disruption caused by “a non-assimilable alien” (Kristeva 1982, p. 11), or the “other”, also provides a space for potential.I don’t even feel like the same person. […] I can never remember being so happy. […] The woman who was terrified of death and what she thought its ugliest manifestation—cancer—of changes, of being without choice or will has survived the confrontation. Cancer is a disease of life, not death.
Dialogic Space and Scenes of Intimacy
However, what is the response when language is failing? How to speak “when the power to speak departs from you” (Nancy and Smock 1993, p. 311)? In Exploding into Life, photographs often enter the space when language is inadequate (in the last two chapters of the book there are more photographs than text, for example). However, how do photographs speak in silence? For Roland Barthes, photographs contain studium, their cultural context, and an “element which rises from the scene, shoots out of it like an arrow, and pierces me”—the punctum (Barthes 2000, p. 26). The punctum for Barthes is this “blind field” (Barthes 2000, p. 57) that is inaccessible via language, “a kind of subtle beyond” (Barthes 2000, p. 59) the visible frame that disturbs and “cries out in silence” (Barthes 2000, p. 53). It extends the visible and often reveals itself after the image is observed. “Absolute subjectivity,” Barthes states, “is achieved only in a state, an effort, of silence (shutting your eyes is to make the image speak in silence)” (Barthes 2000, p. 55). Through temporal delay, the image extends the conversation, and creates an affective response.Maybe in between the communication of disappointment and the disappointment of communication, there is speaking—there where the voice breaks, where the words part and divide in two—in two misunderstandings—where one is able only by mistake to turn away and depart from speaking, failing the obligation that speaking is, but unable, after all, to do that either; unable even to do that; unable to do anything but let the differing of language be—its division, its splitting between two.
Richards’s sensual, ethereal image of Lynch converses with her writing. The photograph also reflects a need to be desired. Their intimacy extends here into being-with, and not a sense of “being-present”. Nancy describes this as the sense of “a present” that is not a being, instead “a coming and a passing, an extending and a penetrating” (Nancy 2007, p. 13) that communicates through resonance. The image and text converse here in a suspended virtuality.After Gene shuts off the lights, he puts his arm around my head, so I roll against him. He kisses me, his lips big and soft against mine. The bristles of his beard scrape against my throat. I feel my stomach flutter, and lower down, the insides of me open. It is always thrilling, always new, this response of mine.
4. The Battle We Didn’t Choose
Electronic links connect lexias ‘external’ to a work […] and thereby create text that is experienced as nonlinear, or, more properly, as multilinear or multisequential. Although conventional reading habits apply within each lexia, once one leaves the shadowy bounds of any text unit, new rules and new experience apply.
Multi-Sensory Engagement
5. Conclusion
Despite their biological death, Jennifer and Lynch still exist to those with whom their lives have been interconnected and also to the readers and observers who have been touched by the images and text. Here, Boyer’s concept of “undying” comes to mind (Boyer 2019a). Boyer describes her experience of surviving yet “dying along with the death of my cells, and not entirely losing myself as I lost the parts of me I associated with me—my memories, my looks, my capacity to think as I once did, my body parts, even the certainty of my own existence” (Boyer 2019b). Similarly, in these projects, life and death is described as unravelling, as the boundaries of existence and experience are challenged and reshaped.No one is special, are they, when all is said and done? And, of course, each of us is very special, very singular, carrying weight. I matter. […] I would like to open the window tonight and yell that outside. I matter. Or go down and lie next to the plants and whisper it.
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | In this paper I define illness as lived experience of physical and mental disease. Disease, as defined by Kleinman, is ‘the practitioner’s construction of patient complaints in the technical terminology of a particular healing system’ (Kleinman and Seeman 2000, p. 231). |
2 | The image can be viewed here: http://www.beautyoutofdamage.com/index.html. |
3 | In the US the funding for breast cancer research has rapidly increased from just under $100 million in 1990 (Lerner 2002, p. 227) to $721 million in 2018 (NIH Categorical Spending 2019). Although the survival rate of breast cancer since the 1980s has improved, its causes are not fully understood and despite medical advances, existing treatments are still just as aggressive and toxic, and more mutilating than the illness itself. |
4 | The book received the 1986 Nikon Award for photographic book of the year. In the same year, Eugene Richards’s photographs of Lynch were shown at the Théâtre Antique in Arles, France. When the book was published, not all reviews were positive. As Richards discloses in an interview: “It became, in time, a book that helped women talk about their bodies, and their explorations of self. At the time, the American Cancer Society didn’t want it. People trashed it” (Richards and McCullin 2011, para. 30). |
5 | The images of the occupation of the Seabrook, New Hamphire nuclear power plant and the birth of his friends’ child, alongside Lynch’s text, were published in a book, 50 Hours, in 1983. |
6 | Notably, the word “fight” does not appear in the title of Jennifer’s blog. Although the words “fight” and “fighting” appear in entries on her blog several times, the main focus here is on the everyday experience of living with cancer—doctor’s appointments; treatments and her reactions to them; her fears, revelations and joy at seeing her friends and family. As much as the project The Battle we Didn’t Choose—My Wife’s Fight with Breast Cancer is about Jennifer’s lived experience of breast cancer, it is also about Merendino’s fight to not let go of her. Photography, as externalised memory, plays a part in this fight to capture and behold. |
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Sile, A. Exploring Intimacy in Collaborative Photographic Narratives of Breast Cancer. Humanities 2020, 9, 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/h9010027
Sile A. Exploring Intimacy in Collaborative Photographic Narratives of Breast Cancer. Humanities. 2020; 9(1):27. https://doi.org/10.3390/h9010027
Chicago/Turabian StyleSile, Agnese. 2020. "Exploring Intimacy in Collaborative Photographic Narratives of Breast Cancer" Humanities 9, no. 1: 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/h9010027
APA StyleSile, A. (2020). Exploring Intimacy in Collaborative Photographic Narratives of Breast Cancer. Humanities, 9(1), 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/h9010027