Taking their cut [electronic resource] : constructing the female patient through American health policy, 1990-1993 /
Abstract (Summary)
Lynda Dixon, Advisor
The topic that is addressed here is the embodying of the female patient through
the political-medical discourse that accompanied the Women’s Health Equity Act and
breast cancer politics between 1990 and 1993. Through an examination of women’s
health policy during these formative years together with Foucault’s theory of the gaze
and embodiment, this paper will formulate the manner in which the female patient comes
to personify certain characteristics and medical concerns as an effect of the relationship
between politics and medicine. In addition to the central thesis supplementary themes
materialize throughout the paper. One motif is the cyclical relationship between politics
and the media. When one party brings a subject to the forefront, the other reacts and
strengthens national attention concerning the matter. Women’s health as a disciplinary
field also raises questions regarding theories of the body by constricting patients to
binary categories of male/man and female/woman, a concept that draw parallels to the
codification of race/ethnicity in society. As a policy issue women’s health illustrates the
contradictions that exist between the body, disease, the goals of medical care, and our
self-image in relation to policy makers. Reviewing this period of research and the
formation of women’s health policy exposes the multifaceted relationship between
politics and medicine. Simultaneously, policy crafted between 1990 and 1993 highlights
the deep roots of cultural bias concerning the social value of female bodies and their
feminine body parts.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:Bowling Green State University
School Location:USA - Ohio
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:women patients medicine
ISBN:
Date of Publication: