When the Future is Not Bright: Social and Political Stakes in Discussing Childhood Cancer in Romanian Media

In contemporary societies’ perception of children, death plays an incredibly insignificant role. This role goes from being ornamental, a weak reminder that our civilisation has overcome the times of children’s high mortality rates, to being some other society’s concern....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Adriana Teodorescu, Dan Chiribucă
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-11-01
Series:Children
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/6/11/126
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spelling doaj-b4ede6b82d9746aabf5edd44efc910782021-04-02T12:28:00ZengMDPI AGChildren2227-90672019-11-0161112610.3390/children6110126children6110126When the Future is Not Bright: Social and Political Stakes in Discussing Childhood Cancer in Romanian MediaAdriana Teodorescu0Dan Chiribucă1Sociology Department, Babeș-Bolyai University, 400604 Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaSociology Department, Babeș-Bolyai University, 400604 Cluj-Napoca, RomaniaIn contemporary societies’ perception of children, death plays an incredibly insignificant role. This role goes from being ornamental, a weak reminder that our civilisation has overcome the times of children’s high mortality rates, to being some other society’s concern. Despite both medical improvements and cultural constructions of the child as an immanent and social transcendence, children can and do die. Although an increasing number of recent studies disclose and legitimise children’s preoccupation with death and dying in the context of a popular culture fascinated with death, studies interested in the representations of death and dying in children are rather scant. In this article, we investigate the social and political stakes in discussing children’s cancer in today’s Romanian media, aiming to make visible how the illustrations of the connections between children, death and illness are never ethically neutral. We begin with the observation that, during recent years, there has been a growing media focus on childhood cancer in Romania. Adopting a qualitative approach and resorting to comparative analysis, we analyse what lies beneath the intentions of criticising troublesome socio-political or medical realities of childhood cancer, revealing the mechanisms through which childhood cancer is transformed into a social illness and the cultural implications for the acceptance of death as an inherent part of life both for children and the population as a whole.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/6/11/126deathchildrenchildhood cancermediaimmanent transcendencesocial transcendencesocial illnessnational illnessdeath acceptance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adriana Teodorescu
Dan Chiribucă
spellingShingle Adriana Teodorescu
Dan Chiribucă
When the Future is Not Bright: Social and Political Stakes in Discussing Childhood Cancer in Romanian Media
Children
death
children
childhood cancer
media
immanent transcendence
social transcendence
social illness
national illness
death acceptance
author_facet Adriana Teodorescu
Dan Chiribucă
author_sort Adriana Teodorescu
title When the Future is Not Bright: Social and Political Stakes in Discussing Childhood Cancer in Romanian Media
title_short When the Future is Not Bright: Social and Political Stakes in Discussing Childhood Cancer in Romanian Media
title_full When the Future is Not Bright: Social and Political Stakes in Discussing Childhood Cancer in Romanian Media
title_fullStr When the Future is Not Bright: Social and Political Stakes in Discussing Childhood Cancer in Romanian Media
title_full_unstemmed When the Future is Not Bright: Social and Political Stakes in Discussing Childhood Cancer in Romanian Media
title_sort when the future is not bright: social and political stakes in discussing childhood cancer in romanian media
publisher MDPI AG
series Children
issn 2227-9067
publishDate 2019-11-01
description In contemporary societies’ perception of children, death plays an incredibly insignificant role. This role goes from being ornamental, a weak reminder that our civilisation has overcome the times of children’s high mortality rates, to being some other society’s concern. Despite both medical improvements and cultural constructions of the child as an immanent and social transcendence, children can and do die. Although an increasing number of recent studies disclose and legitimise children’s preoccupation with death and dying in the context of a popular culture fascinated with death, studies interested in the representations of death and dying in children are rather scant. In this article, we investigate the social and political stakes in discussing children’s cancer in today’s Romanian media, aiming to make visible how the illustrations of the connections between children, death and illness are never ethically neutral. We begin with the observation that, during recent years, there has been a growing media focus on childhood cancer in Romania. Adopting a qualitative approach and resorting to comparative analysis, we analyse what lies beneath the intentions of criticising troublesome socio-political or medical realities of childhood cancer, revealing the mechanisms through which childhood cancer is transformed into a social illness and the cultural implications for the acceptance of death as an inherent part of life both for children and the population as a whole.
topic death
children
childhood cancer
media
immanent transcendence
social transcendence
social illness
national illness
death acceptance
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-9067/6/11/126
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