The doxa of smoking and implications for lung cancer patients

From natural and glamorous to self-inflicted and impure

Forfattere

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15845/praxeologi.v7.4534

Emneord (Nøkkelord):

Doxa, lung cancer, stigma, Medical prestige, Bourdieu

Sammendrag

This paper explores the stigma associated with smoking and lung cancer patients by examining the doxical notions on which it rests and its implications for healthcare settings. Through the lens of Pierre Bourdieu’s concept of doxa, we analyse how historical advertising and anti-smoking campaigns have reshaped the image of smoking – from glamorous to self-inflicted and filthy – reinforcing a ‘stacked stigma’ characterised by impurity, self-blame, and low prestige in the healthcare sector. Lung cancer patients do not align with the healthcare sector’s ideal image of a patient who maintains a healthy body, leading to moral judgment and self-blame. This ‘stacked stigma’ also affects lung cancer patients by making them ‘guilty by association’, complicating their interactions with healthcare professionals.

Forfatterbiografier

Charlotte Nilsen, VID vitenskapelige høgskole

PhD kandidat, Senter for diakoni og profesjonell praksis

Gudmund Ågotnes, Høgskolen på Vestlandet

Professor, Institutt for velferd og deltaking

Nedlastinger

Publisert

2025-06-30

Hvordan referere

Nilsen, C. og Ågotnes, G. (2025) «The doxa of smoking and implications for lung cancer patients: From natural and glamorous to self-inflicted and impure », Praxeologi – et kritisk refleksivt blikk på sosiale praktikker, 7, s. e453. doi: 10.15845/praxeologi.v7.4534.

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