Modifying my self: A qualitative study exploring agency, structure and identity for women seeking publicly funded plastic surgery in Australia

IF 1.4 2区 社会学 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
K. Foley, Nicola Dean, Connie Musolino, Randall Long, P. Ward
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Our sociological knowledge base about plastic surgery has been predominantly constructed in free market contexts, leaving uncertainties as to how sociological theory around agency, identity, and structure apply in the context of publicly funded plastic surgeries. We draw on narratives of Australian women while waiting for abdominoplasty in the public system and recounting their post-surgical realities to understand the relational, dependent and interdependent agency–structure networks in which women's bodies, affects, lives and eligibility requirements are enmeshed. We found women adopted a ‘deserving’ identity to help them claim and enact agency as they felt and navigated the layered structures that govern publicly funded abdominoplasty in Australia, and theorise how this might influence unfolding patterns of social life. We explicate the importance of locating women's lived experiences of medical (dys)function vis-à-vis the sociocultural histories of medicine, health, gender and citizenship that give rise to publicly funded healthcare.
改变我的自我:一项探索澳大利亚寻求公共资助整形手术的女性的代理、结构和身份的定性研究
我们关于整形外科的社会学知识库主要是在自由市场背景下构建的,这给围绕代理、身份和结构的社会学理论如何应用于公共资助的整形外科留下了不确定性。我们借鉴了澳大利亚女性在公共系统中等待腹部整形手术的故事,并讲述了她们手术后的现实,以了解女性的身体、影响、生活和资格要求所涉及的关系、依赖和相互依存的机构-结构网络。我们发现,女性采用了一种“值得”的身份,以帮助她们在澳大利亚公共资助的腹部整形术的分层结构中感受和驾驭时,主张和实施代理权,并对这可能如何影响正在展开的社会生活模式进行了理论分析。我们阐述了将女性的医疗(功能障碍)生活经历与产生公共资助医疗保健的医学、健康、性别和公民身份的社会文化历史相比较的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
8.30%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: The Journal of Sociology is an international peer reviewed journal that publishes the highest quality original research in the social sciences.
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