Abstract

This paper is located at the intersection of scholarship on creative geographies and geographies of dying, death and “living on” (survival). It explores the intimate experience of breast cancer through the practice of creative bricolage which uses autobiographical poetry and photographs. Employing a roving writing strategy that allows for multiple entry points and connectivities surrounding the complex meshworks of precarious cancer survival, the paper traverses health, emotional, environmental and political concerns. In so doing, the paper makes three key contributions: first, in considering how a creative sensibility might bring more visceral, emotionally sensitive and politically embedded accounts of death, dying and survival into the realm of geographical visibility; second, in exploring some of the potentials and limitations of using do‐it‐yourself bricolage as a creative practice; and third, in revealing how a geographical mindset, with its attention to multiple intersecting sites and its ability to promulgate holistic relational understanding, can widen the aesthetic terrain of breast cancer beyond dominant tropes of consumerist sentimentality or heroic femininity towards an aesthetics of precarity.

Highlights

  • Creativity is firmly established on the geographic agenda (Hawkins 2014; Hawkins et al 2015) and the aesthetic has played a central, if contested role, in the discipline’s epistemological development (Hawkins and Straughan 2015, 1, 3-6)

  • I challenge these two dominant troupes by examining the diverse embodied ‘realities’ of living through and on from breast cancer and create a more holistic understanding of how breast cancer might be aesthetically grasped. Examination of this aesthetic terrain of breast cancer speaks to the literature on geographies of dying and death (Evans 2014; Maddrell 2013; McNiven 2016; Stevenson et al 2016)

  • In using creative autobiographical bricolage to grapple with the intricacies of the intimate experiences, emotions and practices associated with living through a cancer diagnosis, this paper has responded to Romanillos’ (2014, 15) call to bring mortal conditions of vulnerability within the threshold of geographical visibility

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Summary

Introduction

Creativity is firmly established on the geographic agenda (Hawkins 2014; Hawkins et al 2015) and the aesthetic has played a central, if contested role, in the discipline’s epistemological development (Hawkins and Straughan 2015, 1, 3-6).

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