Women's Health Advocacy
Rhetorical Ingenuity for the 21st Century
Herausgeber: White-Farnham, Jamie; Molloy, Cathryn; Siegel Finer, Bryna
Women's Health Advocacy
Rhetorical Ingenuity for the 21st Century
Herausgeber: White-Farnham, Jamie; Molloy, Cathryn; Siegel Finer, Bryna
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Women's Health Advocacy tackles how women use various communication strategies to effect change in a health system that can be difficult to participate in and harmful by explicating rhetorical ingenuity-the creation of rhetorical means for specific and technical, yet personal, situations.
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Women's Health Advocacy tackles how women use various communication strategies to effect change in a health system that can be difficult to participate in and harmful by explicating rhetorical ingenuity-the creation of rhetorical means for specific and technical, yet personal, situations.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 226
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 340g
- ISBN-13: 9780367192259
- ISBN-10: 036719225X
- Artikelnr.: 57373951
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 226
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Juli 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 340g
- ISBN-13: 9780367192259
- ISBN-10: 036719225X
- Artikelnr.: 57373951
Jamie White-Farnham is Associate Professor and Writing Coordinator at the University of Wisconsin-Superior. Bryna Siegel Finer is Associate Professor and the Director of Writing Across the Curriculum at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. Cathryn Molloy is Associate Professor and Director of Undergraduate Studies in James Madison University's School of Writing, Rhetoric and Technical Communication.
Introduction
Jamie White-Farnham and Cathryn Molloy
Section 1: Rhetorics of Self
Advocate
Donna Laux
1. Writing My Body, Writing My Health: A Rhetorical Autoethnography
Kim Hensley Owens
2. Temporal Disruptions: Illness Narratives Before and After Web 2.0
Ann Wallace
3.Analyzing PCOS Discourses: Strategies for Unpacking Chronic Illness and
Taking Action
Marissa McKinley
4.Rhetorics of Empowerment for Managing Lupus Pain: Patient-to-Patient
Knowledge Sharing in Online Health Forums
Cynthia Pengilly
5. Rhetorics of Self-Disclosure: A Feminist Framework for Infertility
Activism
Maria Novotny and Lori Beth De Hertogh
Section 2: Rhetorics of/and the Patient
Bridging the Gap in Care for Women
Janeen Qadri
6. Making Bodies Matter: Norms and Excesses in the Well-Woman Visit
Kelly Whitney
7. Doula Advocacy: Strategies for Consent in Labor and Delivery
Sheri Rysdam
8. Gendered Responsibility: A Critique of HPV Vaccine Advertisements,
2006-2016
Erin Fitzgerald
9. "Pregnant? You Need a Flu Shot!": Safety and Danger in Medical
Discourses of Maternal Immunization
Lisa M. DeTora and Jennifer A. Malkowski
10. "Most Doctors Will Just Say 'Stop running'": Women Runners' Narratives,
Agency, and Identity
Billie R. Tadros
Section 3: Rhetorics of Advocacy
Fighting Cancer from Every Angle
April Cabral
11.Reframing Efficiency Through Usability: The Code and Baby-Friendly USA
Oriana Gilson
12. "You Have to Be Your Own Advocate": Patient Self-Advocacy as a Coping
Mechanism for Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Risk
Marleah Dean
13. Activism by Accuracy: Women's Health and Hormonal Birth Control
Kristin Marie Bivens, Kirsti Cole, and Amy Koerber
14. Altering Imaginaries and Demanding Treatment: Women's AIDS Activism in
Toronto, 1980s-1990s
Janna Klostermann
15. Costly Expedience: Reproductive Rights and Responses to Slut Shaming
Laurie McMillan
Afterword - "The Rhetorician [of Health and Medicine] as Agent of Social
Change": Activism for the Whole Woman's Body
Bryna Siegel Finer
Jamie White-Farnham and Cathryn Molloy
Section 1: Rhetorics of Self
Advocate
Donna Laux
1. Writing My Body, Writing My Health: A Rhetorical Autoethnography
Kim Hensley Owens
2. Temporal Disruptions: Illness Narratives Before and After Web 2.0
Ann Wallace
3.Analyzing PCOS Discourses: Strategies for Unpacking Chronic Illness and
Taking Action
Marissa McKinley
4.Rhetorics of Empowerment for Managing Lupus Pain: Patient-to-Patient
Knowledge Sharing in Online Health Forums
Cynthia Pengilly
5. Rhetorics of Self-Disclosure: A Feminist Framework for Infertility
Activism
Maria Novotny and Lori Beth De Hertogh
Section 2: Rhetorics of/and the Patient
Bridging the Gap in Care for Women
Janeen Qadri
6. Making Bodies Matter: Norms and Excesses in the Well-Woman Visit
Kelly Whitney
7. Doula Advocacy: Strategies for Consent in Labor and Delivery
Sheri Rysdam
8. Gendered Responsibility: A Critique of HPV Vaccine Advertisements,
2006-2016
Erin Fitzgerald
9. "Pregnant? You Need a Flu Shot!": Safety and Danger in Medical
Discourses of Maternal Immunization
Lisa M. DeTora and Jennifer A. Malkowski
10. "Most Doctors Will Just Say 'Stop running'": Women Runners' Narratives,
Agency, and Identity
Billie R. Tadros
Section 3: Rhetorics of Advocacy
Fighting Cancer from Every Angle
April Cabral
11.Reframing Efficiency Through Usability: The Code and Baby-Friendly USA
Oriana Gilson
12. "You Have to Be Your Own Advocate": Patient Self-Advocacy as a Coping
Mechanism for Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Risk
Marleah Dean
13. Activism by Accuracy: Women's Health and Hormonal Birth Control
Kristin Marie Bivens, Kirsti Cole, and Amy Koerber
14. Altering Imaginaries and Demanding Treatment: Women's AIDS Activism in
Toronto, 1980s-1990s
Janna Klostermann
15. Costly Expedience: Reproductive Rights and Responses to Slut Shaming
Laurie McMillan
Afterword - "The Rhetorician [of Health and Medicine] as Agent of Social
Change": Activism for the Whole Woman's Body
Bryna Siegel Finer
Introduction
Jamie White-Farnham and Cathryn Molloy
Section 1: Rhetorics of Self
Advocate
Donna Laux
1. Writing My Body, Writing My Health: A Rhetorical Autoethnography
Kim Hensley Owens
2. Temporal Disruptions: Illness Narratives Before and After Web 2.0
Ann Wallace
3.Analyzing PCOS Discourses: Strategies for Unpacking Chronic Illness and
Taking Action
Marissa McKinley
4.Rhetorics of Empowerment for Managing Lupus Pain: Patient-to-Patient
Knowledge Sharing in Online Health Forums
Cynthia Pengilly
5. Rhetorics of Self-Disclosure: A Feminist Framework for Infertility
Activism
Maria Novotny and Lori Beth De Hertogh
Section 2: Rhetorics of/and the Patient
Bridging the Gap in Care for Women
Janeen Qadri
6. Making Bodies Matter: Norms and Excesses in the Well-Woman Visit
Kelly Whitney
7. Doula Advocacy: Strategies for Consent in Labor and Delivery
Sheri Rysdam
8. Gendered Responsibility: A Critique of HPV Vaccine Advertisements,
2006-2016
Erin Fitzgerald
9. "Pregnant? You Need a Flu Shot!": Safety and Danger in Medical
Discourses of Maternal Immunization
Lisa M. DeTora and Jennifer A. Malkowski
10. "Most Doctors Will Just Say 'Stop running'": Women Runners' Narratives,
Agency, and Identity
Billie R. Tadros
Section 3: Rhetorics of Advocacy
Fighting Cancer from Every Angle
April Cabral
11.Reframing Efficiency Through Usability: The Code and Baby-Friendly USA
Oriana Gilson
12. "You Have to Be Your Own Advocate": Patient Self-Advocacy as a Coping
Mechanism for Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Risk
Marleah Dean
13. Activism by Accuracy: Women's Health and Hormonal Birth Control
Kristin Marie Bivens, Kirsti Cole, and Amy Koerber
14. Altering Imaginaries and Demanding Treatment: Women's AIDS Activism in
Toronto, 1980s-1990s
Janna Klostermann
15. Costly Expedience: Reproductive Rights and Responses to Slut Shaming
Laurie McMillan
Afterword - "The Rhetorician [of Health and Medicine] as Agent of Social
Change": Activism for the Whole Woman's Body
Bryna Siegel Finer
Jamie White-Farnham and Cathryn Molloy
Section 1: Rhetorics of Self
Advocate
Donna Laux
1. Writing My Body, Writing My Health: A Rhetorical Autoethnography
Kim Hensley Owens
2. Temporal Disruptions: Illness Narratives Before and After Web 2.0
Ann Wallace
3.Analyzing PCOS Discourses: Strategies for Unpacking Chronic Illness and
Taking Action
Marissa McKinley
4.Rhetorics of Empowerment for Managing Lupus Pain: Patient-to-Patient
Knowledge Sharing in Online Health Forums
Cynthia Pengilly
5. Rhetorics of Self-Disclosure: A Feminist Framework for Infertility
Activism
Maria Novotny and Lori Beth De Hertogh
Section 2: Rhetorics of/and the Patient
Bridging the Gap in Care for Women
Janeen Qadri
6. Making Bodies Matter: Norms and Excesses in the Well-Woman Visit
Kelly Whitney
7. Doula Advocacy: Strategies for Consent in Labor and Delivery
Sheri Rysdam
8. Gendered Responsibility: A Critique of HPV Vaccine Advertisements,
2006-2016
Erin Fitzgerald
9. "Pregnant? You Need a Flu Shot!": Safety and Danger in Medical
Discourses of Maternal Immunization
Lisa M. DeTora and Jennifer A. Malkowski
10. "Most Doctors Will Just Say 'Stop running'": Women Runners' Narratives,
Agency, and Identity
Billie R. Tadros
Section 3: Rhetorics of Advocacy
Fighting Cancer from Every Angle
April Cabral
11.Reframing Efficiency Through Usability: The Code and Baby-Friendly USA
Oriana Gilson
12. "You Have to Be Your Own Advocate": Patient Self-Advocacy as a Coping
Mechanism for Hereditary Breast and Ovarian Cancer Risk
Marleah Dean
13. Activism by Accuracy: Women's Health and Hormonal Birth Control
Kristin Marie Bivens, Kirsti Cole, and Amy Koerber
14. Altering Imaginaries and Demanding Treatment: Women's AIDS Activism in
Toronto, 1980s-1990s
Janna Klostermann
15. Costly Expedience: Reproductive Rights and Responses to Slut Shaming
Laurie McMillan
Afterword - "The Rhetorician [of Health and Medicine] as Agent of Social
Change": Activism for the Whole Woman's Body
Bryna Siegel Finer