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Relentless: One Woman's Story of Betrayal by the Medical System - Paperback

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by Stephanie Greco Larson (Author)

Part memoir, part indictment, Relentless is one woman's honest and unflinching account of suffering from terminal cancer. In December 2006, Stephanie Greco Larson, a forty-six year old political science professor at Dickinson College, was diagnosed with inoperable cancer. Oncologists told her that the disease would kill her in mere months. In the four years following her diagnosis, Larson endured being pricked, prodded, cut, injected, ignored, and scolded by doctors who tried to stave off her incurable cancer. Drafted between her diagnosis and death in 2011, Relentless provides one patient's perspective of living and dying with peritoneal cancer in the American medical system, a system she found ill-equipped to hear, treat, and comfort those with aggressive and eventually fatal forms of cancer. From health insurance to hospice care, Larson catalogs the shortcomings of the American healthcare system and its failure to serve those who cannot be cured. Larson deconstructs our society's notion that the ideal cancer patient should be the positive fighter who keeps the messy parts of the disease to herself: I'm more comfortable with the term "cancer victim," but that term is passé. It has been stripped from the discourse by those seeking agency, and ironically, by those who want to empower us. If I call myself a cancer victim, people get unhappy. They don't want to think of me as a victim. I don't fit the cowering, helpless stereotype they have in their heads. So they correct me: "You're no victim"; "You're still here, aren't you"; or the generic "Don't say that. You have to stay positive." So if I'm not a victim or a survivor, and I'm not really living with cancer or necessarily in treatment, what am I? I'd say that I am a "cancer sufferer." I am a cancer sufferer. I have cancer. I suffer from it. I am not always fighting. I am not always in treatment. I am not yet dead from cancer, but I will be in months or years, and until then, my life is fundamentally altered by the presence of cancer and the medical protocols for treating it. I am a cancer sufferer. Like fools, I don't suffer it gladly. Edited and published posthumously, Relentless is Larson's refusal to stay silent about the uncomfortable realities of her treatment and terminal illness. Under the steady hands of Meg Allen, her former student, and David Srokose, her devoted husband, this, her final rallying cry, boldly challenges readers to cease substituting catch phrases like "stay positive" and "think pink" for actual compassion. All profits from this memoir go toward the Stephanie Greco Larson Scholarship at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

Author Biography

Professor Stephanie Greco Larson was a part of the Dickinson Community from 1992-2011, and her impact was seen on many levels. She was a member of the Political Science department, and a contributor to many other programs including American Studies, Film Studies, Gender Studies and the Writing Program. Stephanie was innovative in her methods and challenged her students to become better scholars and writers. As her husband, I noticed that Stephanie approached each class as a new opportunity and challenge, whether she taught that class one time or many times over the years. Professor Larson was a contributor to Dickinson College in more ways than just academics. She was an accomplished and proficient scholar, with numerous published books and journal articles, primarily in on the topic of media and politics. She led study abroad programs in Australia and England participated in faculty intellectual exchanges in Toulouse and Bologna. Professor Larson's wit, perception and analytical skills enabled her to be a successful leader, friend and colleague.

Number of Pages: 438
Dimensions: 0.89 x 8.5 x 5.51 IN
Publication Date: May 07, 2014
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by Stephanie Greco Larson (Author)

Part memoir, part indictment, Relentless is one woman's honest and unflinching account of suffering from terminal cancer. In December 2006, Stephanie Greco Larson, a forty-six year old political science professor at Dickinson College, was diagnosed with inoperable cancer. Oncologists told her that the disease would kill her in mere months. In the four years following her diagnosis, Larson endured being pricked, prodded, cut, injected, ignored, and scolded by doctors who tried to stave off her incurable cancer. Drafted between her diagnosis and death in 2011, Relentless provides one patient's perspective of living and dying with peritoneal cancer in the American medical system, a system she found ill-equipped to hear, treat, and comfort those with aggressive and eventually fatal forms of cancer. From health insurance to hospice care, Larson catalogs the shortcomings of the American healthcare system and its failure to serve those who cannot be cured. Larson deconstructs our society's notion that the ideal cancer patient should be the positive fighter who keeps the messy parts of the disease to herself: I'm more comfortable with the term "cancer victim," but that term is passé. It has been stripped from the discourse by those seeking agency, and ironically, by those who want to empower us. If I call myself a cancer victim, people get unhappy. They don't want to think of me as a victim. I don't fit the cowering, helpless stereotype they have in their heads. So they correct me: "You're no victim"; "You're still here, aren't you"; or the generic "Don't say that. You have to stay positive." So if I'm not a victim or a survivor, and I'm not really living with cancer or necessarily in treatment, what am I? I'd say that I am a "cancer sufferer." I am a cancer sufferer. I have cancer. I suffer from it. I am not always fighting. I am not always in treatment. I am not yet dead from cancer, but I will be in months or years, and until then, my life is fundamentally altered by the presence of cancer and the medical protocols for treating it. I am a cancer sufferer. Like fools, I don't suffer it gladly. Edited and published posthumously, Relentless is Larson's refusal to stay silent about the uncomfortable realities of her treatment and terminal illness. Under the steady hands of Meg Allen, her former student, and David Srokose, her devoted husband, this, her final rallying cry, boldly challenges readers to cease substituting catch phrases like "stay positive" and "think pink" for actual compassion. All profits from this memoir go toward the Stephanie Greco Larson Scholarship at Dickinson College in Carlisle, Pennsylvania.

Author Biography

Professor Stephanie Greco Larson was a part of the Dickinson Community from 1992-2011, and her impact was seen on many levels. She was a member of the Political Science department, and a contributor to many other programs including American Studies, Film Studies, Gender Studies and the Writing Program. Stephanie was innovative in her methods and challenged her students to become better scholars and writers. As her husband, I noticed that Stephanie approached each class as a new opportunity and challenge, whether she taught that class one time or many times over the years. Professor Larson was a contributor to Dickinson College in more ways than just academics. She was an accomplished and proficient scholar, with numerous published books and journal articles, primarily in on the topic of media and politics. She led study abroad programs in Australia and England participated in faculty intellectual exchanges in Toulouse and Bologna. Professor Larson's wit, perception and analytical skills enabled her to be a successful leader, friend and colleague.

Number of Pages: 438
Dimensions: 0.89 x 8.5 x 5.51 IN
Publication Date: May 07, 2014

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Relentless: One Woman's Story of Betrayal by the Medical System - Paperback

Relentless: One Woman's Story of Betrayal by the Medical System - Paperback

$39.94
Relentless: One Woman's Story of Betrayal by the Medical System - Paperback

Relentless: One Woman's Story of Betrayal by the Medical System - Paperback

$39.94
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