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(2015) Human Studies 38 (3).

The surprise of a breast reconstruction

a longitudinal phenomenological study to women's expectations about reconstructive surgery

Marjolein de Boer, René van der Hulst, Jenny Slatman

pp. 409-430

While having a breast reconstruction, women have certain expectations about their future breasted bodies. The aim of this paper is to describe and analyze these expectations in the process of reconstruction. By applying a qualitative, phenomenological study within a longitudinal research design, this paper acknowledges the temporarily complex, contextualized, embodied, and subjective nature of the phenomenon of expectations. The analysis identified expectations regarding three different aspects of women's embodiment: (1) their gazed body, (2) their capable/practical body, and (3) their felt body. After reconstruction, these women try to reconfigure—adjust, level or retrospectively rewrite—their expectations. Further, some women face what apparently arrives totally unexpected, namely a strange feeling breast or a failed reconstruction. The development of these women's expectations can be understood as an active, continuously evolving, difficult and sometimes impossible dynamic of expecting the surprise that is a breast reconstruction. Within this dynamic, women formulate and reconfigure—by definition—unrealistic expectations and validate and try to achieve unexpected futures. We suggest that medical professionals can facilitate this dynamic in various ways.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s10746-015-9360-6

Full citation:

de Boer, M. , van der Hulst, R. , Slatman, J. (2015). The surprise of a breast reconstruction: a longitudinal phenomenological study to women's expectations about reconstructive surgery. Human Studies 38 (3), pp. 409-430.

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