Glamorous Healing and ‘Rebellious Hope’: Tracing Grief in Transmedial Cancer Life Writing
: Joutseno, Astrid
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
: 2025
Life writing
: 1
: 15
: 1448-4528
: 1751-2964
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/14484528.2025.2578188
: https://doi.org/10.1080/14484528.2025.2578188
: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/506023058
This article investigates transmedial autobiographical writing practices by women ill with metastatic cancer. Their multi-platformed and mediated life writing normalises the writing about and commercialising of grief and dying. I draw examples from two popular cancer life writers: Canadian Nalie Agustin and British Dame Deborah James, who inscribed their lives and selves on digital platforms until death. I look for their performances and omissions of what I have named the grief of the dying; a particular form of grieving that impacts those living with incurable illness and a heightened sense of death’s nearness. Examining the limits and possibilities that transmedial life writing affords, I trace the transmutations of hope and healing in the autobiographical construction of metastatic cancer. Inscriptions of selves/lives take place in a transmedial network and are informed by the cultural landscapes of intersecting differences. I propose that a highly public life writing practice addressing illness and dying re-inscribes norms of acceptable ill selves and lives, while at the same time exposing illness cultures to critical examination. For the dying life writers, what I describe may ultimately be a hindrance – an ambivalent space when it comes to grieving.
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The writing of this article has been funded by the research project ‘Counter-Narratives of Cancer: Shaping Narrative Agency’ (2023–2027), Research Council of Finland, project number 354789