The inherent tensions and ambiguities of hope: Towards a post-formal analysis of experiences of advanced-cancer patients

Author:

Brown Patrick1,de Graaf Sabine1,Hillen Marij2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

2. Department of Medical Psychology, Academic Medical Center, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

Sociological and anthropological analyses of hope in health-care contexts have tended to address institutional processes, especially the power dynamics that function through such systems or political economies of hope, which in turn shape interactions through which hopes are managed. This article extends this approach through a more detailed consideration of the experience of hoping itself. Our post-formal analysis denotes the tensions that are intrinsic and defining features of lifeworlds around hope, emphasising the dissonance and fragility of hoping. Drawing upon interview and observational data involving patients with advanced-cancer diagnoses who were taking part in clinical trials, we explore three main tensions which emerged within the analysis: tensions involving time and liminality between future and present; ontological tensions involving the concrete and the possible, the ‘realistic’ and the positive; and tensions in taken-for-grantedness between the reflective and the mundane, the specific and the ambiguous. Rather than three separate sets of tensions, those involving time, ontology and taken-for-grantedness are very much interwoven. In denoting the influence of social processes in engendering tensions, we bridge sociological and anthropological approaches with a more definition-oriented literature, developing understandings of hoping and its key characteristics in relation to other processes of coping amidst vulnerability and uncertainty.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health(social science)

Cited by 23 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Narratives of Hope—The Temporal Dimension in the Ontological Manipulation of the Human Embryo;The 6th International Congress of CiiEM—Immediate and Future Challenges to Foster One Health;2023-09-06

2. How can HCI support end-of-life care? Critical perspectives on sociotechnical imaginaries for palliative care;Extended Abstracts of the 2023 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems;2023-04-19

3. Hoping in a COVID-19 World;The Emerald Handbook of the Sociology of Emotions for a Post-Pandemic World;2023-04-14

4. ‘Should I Buy Her a Doll’? Motherhood and Turner Syndrome in Poland;Medical Anthropology;2023-01-27

5. Hope-Based Program for Portuguese Outpatients with Advanced Chronic Illness in a Community Setting: A Randomized Control Trial;International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health;2023-01-14

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