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Showing posts with label gubar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gubar. Show all posts

Monday, April 30, 2012

Amazon.com: Memoir of a Debulked Woman: Enduring Ovarian Cancer (9780393073256): Susan Gubar: Books



Amazon.com: Memoir of a Debulked Woman: Enduring Ovarian Cancer (9780393073256): Susan Gubar: Books

 Book Description
April 30, 2012 0393073254 978-0393073256 1
In this moving memoir, a renowned feminist scholar explores the physical and psychological ordeal of living with ovarian cancer.

Diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2008, Susan Gubar underwent radical debulking surgery, an attempt to excise the cancer by removing part or all of many organs in the lower abdomen. Her memoir mines the deepest levels of anguish and devotion as she struggles to come to terms with her body’s betrayal and the frightful protocols of contemporary medicine. She finds solace in the abiding love of her husband, children, and friends while she searches for understanding in works of literature, visual art, and the testimonies of others who suffer with various forms of cancer.
Ovarian cancer remains an incurable disease for most of those diagnosed, even those lucky enough to find caring and skilled physicians. Memoir of a Debulked Woman is both a polemic against the ineffectual and injurious medical responses to which thousands of women are subjected and a meditation on the gifts of companionship, art, and literature that sustain people in need.

book reviews: New Perspectives From Cancer Patients - NYTimes.com



New Perspectives From Cancer Patients - NYTimes.com


".......That is Susan Gubar’s staggering, searing “Memoir of a Debulked Woman.” Ms. Gubar may not be a health professional, but as a noted feminist critic (she is an author of the influential 1970s classic “Madwoman in the Attic”), she has certainly spent a career immersed in the meaning and functions of the female body. In one of those inexplicably savage medical ironies, she was felled in her early 60s by the worst of the “female” diseases: ovarian cancer. As is common, it had spread throughout her abdomen by the time of diagnosis.
Cases like Ms. Gubar’s are usually first treated with the surgical removal of as much cancer as possible, along with all dispensable abdominal organs that are affected or at risk. This is the “debulking” of her title, and it is about as close to evisceration as civilians can experience. It became her focal metaphor for the experience of sudden dire illness, as all other interests drop away save “an overriding and offensive obsession with one’s own physical vulnerability.” On a less literary note, the procedure winds up bringing her almost more physical grief than the cancer itself.
Ms. Gubar moves back and forth between poet and patient, with the occasional sidestep into academic mode as she reviews writing by women affected with similar illness. It is a difficult and potentially cringe-making project.
But even the most skeptical and finicky reader — even the healthy reader, even the healthy male reader — will not put this book down. Some of its appeal comes from Ms. Gubar’s skill with textual analysis, and some from various appealing verbal shenanigans (has anyone else found and pondered the “mother” in chemotherapy, for instance?). Most gripping, though, is her frank, courageous account of life with a horrific postoperative infection in her large intestine that came to involve the buttock area....