Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse

This study is an empirical exploration of Foucault's theoretical ideas on resistance, through a case study of cervical cancer screening and women's responses to the official discourse surrounding it. In England, this form of screening is organised through a national programme and consisten...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Armstrong, Natalie
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10485/
_version_ 1848791085748322304
author Armstrong, Natalie
author_facet Armstrong, Natalie
author_sort Armstrong, Natalie
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description This study is an empirical exploration of Foucault's theoretical ideas on resistance, through a case study of cervical cancer screening and women's responses to the official discourse surrounding it. In England, this form of screening is organised through a national programme and consistently achieves coverage of over 80%. Given this high attendance it may appear that any resistance is negligible. However, this thesis argues that such a focus on attendance, or behaviour, is misguided and that, by focusing attention on the level at which the official discourse on screening is interpreted, understood and made sense of by individual women, it is possible to identify instances of thought and talk based resistance. Using qualitative interviews with a sample structured to include a range of ethnic backgrounds and ages, the thesis identifies three key forms of resistance. Firstly, women may resist the general subject position suggested within the official discourse and make sense of screening in ways that are meaningful to them as individuals. Secondly, many women resist the general 'at risk' status suggested and negotiate their own position drawing on a range of risk factors that do not always fit well with those medically recognised. Thirdly, in making sense of the information they receive, women frequently attempt to create a rational framework of knowledge and understanding which can lead to them interpreting issues such as risk factors or disease development in different ways. Based upon these, the thesis argues for conceptualising power and resistance in terms of a complex network of possibilities with multiple points of potential difference or divergence that can lead to individuals adopting very different subject positions. Although the majority of resistance detailed is thought and talk based, this is nevertheless important as it provides the means for challenges to the official discourse and constitutes a necessary prerequisite for further behavioural resistance.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T18:22:54Z
format Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
id nottingham-10485
institution University of Nottingham Malaysia Campus
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-14T18:22:54Z
publishDate 2005
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling nottingham-104852025-02-28T11:08:26Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10485/ Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse Armstrong, Natalie This study is an empirical exploration of Foucault's theoretical ideas on resistance, through a case study of cervical cancer screening and women's responses to the official discourse surrounding it. In England, this form of screening is organised through a national programme and consistently achieves coverage of over 80%. Given this high attendance it may appear that any resistance is negligible. However, this thesis argues that such a focus on attendance, or behaviour, is misguided and that, by focusing attention on the level at which the official discourse on screening is interpreted, understood and made sense of by individual women, it is possible to identify instances of thought and talk based resistance. Using qualitative interviews with a sample structured to include a range of ethnic backgrounds and ages, the thesis identifies three key forms of resistance. Firstly, women may resist the general subject position suggested within the official discourse and make sense of screening in ways that are meaningful to them as individuals. Secondly, many women resist the general 'at risk' status suggested and negotiate their own position drawing on a range of risk factors that do not always fit well with those medically recognised. Thirdly, in making sense of the information they receive, women frequently attempt to create a rational framework of knowledge and understanding which can lead to them interpreting issues such as risk factors or disease development in different ways. Based upon these, the thesis argues for conceptualising power and resistance in terms of a complex network of possibilities with multiple points of potential difference or divergence that can lead to individuals adopting very different subject positions. Although the majority of resistance detailed is thought and talk based, this is nevertheless important as it provides the means for challenges to the official discourse and constitutes a necessary prerequisite for further behavioural resistance. 2005 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10485/1/Full_Thesis.pdf Armstrong, Natalie (2005) Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. cervical cancer screening medical sociology qualitative Foucault resistance
spellingShingle cervical cancer
screening
medical sociology
qualitative
Foucault
resistance
Armstrong, Natalie
Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse
title Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse
title_full Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse
title_fullStr Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse
title_full_unstemmed Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse
title_short Cervical Screening: women's resistance to the official discourse
title_sort cervical screening: women's resistance to the official discourse
topic cervical cancer
screening
medical sociology
qualitative
Foucault
resistance
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10485/