Introduction : Mapping the contours of breast cancer
Social movements without the sovereign
Breast cancer in two regimes
The regime of medicalization
Biomedicalization and the biopolitics of screening
Biomedicalization and the anatomo-politics of treatment
Cultures of action in the Bay Area
Early detection and screening activism
Patient empowerment and feminist treatment activism
Cancer prevention and environmental risk
From private stigma to public actions
The impact of disease regimes and social movements on illness experience
Breast cancer in the twenty-first century
Conclusion : The body politics of social movements
Appendix : Multisited ethnography and the extended case method.