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      Men, culture and hegemonic masculinity: understanding the experience of prostate cancer.

      1 ,
      Nursing inquiry
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Following a diagnosis of, and treatment for prostate cancer, there is an expectation that men will cope with, adjust to and accept the psychosocial impact on their lives and relationships. Yet, there is a limited qualitative world literature investigating the psychosocial experience of prostate cancer, and almost no literature exploring how masculinity mediates in such an experience. This paper will suggest that the experience of prostate cancer, the process by which it is investigated, and the way in which it is understood has been shaped by an essentialist interpretation of gender, exemplified by hegemonic masculinity as the archetypal mechanism of male adaptation. In response to this static and limiting view of masculinity, this paper will offer a reframe of hegemonic masculinity. This reframe, being more aligned with common experience, will portray masculinity as a dynamic and contextual construct, better understood as one of a number of cultural reference points around which each man organises and adopts behaviour. It will be suggested that the extant literature, in being organised around hegemonic masculinity, obfuscates the experience of prostate cancer and acts to render covert any collateral masculinities, public or private, that may also be operating.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Nurs Inq
          Nursing inquiry
          Wiley
          1320-7881
          1320-7881
          Jun 2005
          : 12
          : 2
          Affiliations
          [1 ] School of Nursing and Public Health, Edith Cowan University, Perth, Western Australia. d.wall@ecu.edu.au
          Article
          NIN258
          10.1111/j.1440-1800.2005.00258.x
          15892724
          805cdf63-6016-498a-a3db-9876dae46fb2
          History

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