Gender Schema and Prostate Cancer: Veterans' Cultural Model of Masculinity

Authors: Stansbury J.P.; Mathewson-Chapman M.; Grant K.E.

Source: Medical Anthropology, Volume 22, Number 2, April-June 2003 , pp. 175-204(30)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

Coming to terms with disease, chronic illness, and aging may be challenging for men who adhere to an inflexible gender schema. In this study of elder U.S. veterans' ideas about masculinity, we find that prostate cancer patients reaffirm a strongly moral normalizing discourse about "being a man" yet tend to separate roles and values from male physical and sexual attributes. Using systematic data collection methods taken from cognitive anthropology, we map veterans' schema of masculinity and examine the relative importance that cancer patients and non-patients give to gender attributes. The results demonstrate the complementarity between cognitive and narrative approaches in medical anthropology. This research also suggests the hypotheses that (1) coming to terms with iatrogenesis may involve a subtle reformulation of masculinity and that (2) men with a fixed view of masculinity may have worse health outcomes than do those who accept the changes accompanying their treatment for prostate cancer.

Keywords: prostate cancer; gender; masculinity; cognitive methods; quality of life

Document Type: Research article

Publication date: 2003-04-01

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