health

Has the world got pink ribbon fatigue?

October is Breast Cancer Awareness month – so this probably looks pretty familiar.

 

 

 

 

By KAREN BROOKS

October is Breast Cancer Awareness month, where the country and, indeed, the globe is pink-washed.

From brooches to bracelets, key rings, balls, socks, water bottles, sportswear, foodstuffs, races, walks, dinners, auctions, raffles, hair dye and even special deals in Westfield shopping centres, pink products abound.

Invited to show support for those with breast cancer and their families, we drape ourselves in pink, attend functions, watch be-pinked sporting activities, go to work in pinkified environments, donate money, eat, drink and be suitably respectful, merry and moved, and thus do our bit for what’s a horrible scourge that takes away peace of mind, health, dignity and all too often those we love.

There’s lots of money being raised and that has to be a good thing, doesn’t it? After all, we’re told this conspicuous consumption of all things pink funds research, better care and the search for a cure, and, in the case of the very worthy McGrath Foundation, currently 55 breast care nurses across Australia.

So why are critics of this annual pinking of the month emerging? There have been very legitimate concerns raised about the way in which this “pinking” of a serious disease also sexualises, trivialises and, through some of the products such as teddy bears, infantilises sufferers.

It also conveniently ignores what Barbara Enhrenreich, author, social commentator and former breast cancer patient, calls the “Cancer Industrial Complex: the multinational corporate enterprise that with the one hand doles out carcinogens and disease and, with the other, offers expensive, semi-toxic pharmaceutical treatments.”

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as comedian Jennifer Saunders (herself a former cancer sufferer) recently discovered

If you do, you’re read as ill-willed, uncaring, deliberately misunderstanding corporate and individual motivation and made a social pariah. Yet if we can’t examine this now, during a month dedicated to all things breast cancer, when can we?

This October we immersed ourselves in “cancer culture” (as it has been termed) and draped ourselves in pink the same way one might use garlic to ward off vampires.

In and of itself, this is a terrific and clever movement. But how prolific and, at times, far removed from its origins this “pinking”- the numerous products being sold and corporations that become involved – has become.

And all this raises awareness, and in a lovely, feel-good way, which in turn, according to reports and statements, leads to financial and other kinds of help, but hasn’t the cause succeeded in its intentions?

The importance of self-examination, screening through mammograms and discussing concerns with doctors are ingrained in women (and their partners to encourage) from an early age. We’re aware and alarmed.

As a cancer patient myself, while I appreciate the sentiment behind the giving, buying and general inclusivity, I also understand the growth of what’s been termed “pink ribbon fatigue”.

There is too much and it’s everywhere.

There are now so many products and so many businesses keen to link their brand to the positive connotations and female-centric nature of breast cancer awareness that it borders on being exploitative.

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Dr Karen Brooks

It exploits people’s hope, relief, guilt (that they were overlooked by the disease or “survived”, an overused and highly problematic cancer trope as if those who died somehow gave up the “fight”, or didn’t hope or try hard enough) and above all fear. Awareness, through consumption isn’t limited to October but like a continuous sale, occurs throughout the year.

Academic Lauren Rosenwarne wrote an acerbic piece on the launch, in the US, of a pink pepper spray gun. She concludes that, “… $1 going to breast cancer research is better than none. But is there not such a thing as brand soiling? That attaching the pink ribbon to goods like dog clothes and cleaning products positions the whole thing as less about charity and more about merchandising?”

When we don pink and help the “fight” (another overused and awful word), we also need to be mindful that we’re not exchanging support for sentimentality, or trivialising someone’s ordeal through brand association.

There’s nothing wrong with buying pink ribbons and other products. It’s important to show our support and care, but there’s also nothing wrong with thinking critically about why we’re doing it and what the products actually signify – to the cause and the business promoting them. Above all, We need to remember that behind the pretty pink facade lies suffering humans – frightened, hoping, angry, grateful, sick and forever changed – and they’re the “lucky” ones.

This story was originally published in The Courier-Mail and is republished here with full permission of the author.

Dr Karen Brooks is an Honorary Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Critical and Cultural Studies at the University of Queensland, a weekly columnist with the Courier Mail and author of nine books.

What do you think about the criticism of Pink Ribbon Day? Is it justified?