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Claire Harris
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INVISIBLE

Michele Lent Hirsch

How Young Women with Serious Health Issues Navigate Work, Relationships, and the Pressure to Seem Just Fine

An exploration of women navigating serious health issues at an age where they're expected to be healthy, dating, having careers and children.
Miriam's doctor didn't believe she had breast cancer. She did.
Sophie navigates being the only black scientist in her lab while studying the very disease, HIV, that she hides from her coworkers.
For Victoria, coming out as a transgender woman was less difficult than coming out as bipolar.

Author Michele Lent Hirsch knew she couldn't be the only woman who's faced serious health issues at a young age, as well as the resulting effects on her career, her relationships, and her sense of self. What she found while researching Invisible was a surprisingly large and overlooked population with important stories to tell.

Though young women with serious illness tend to be seen as outliers, young female patients are in fact the primary demographic for many illnesses. They are also one of the most ignored groups in our medical system - a system where young women, especially women of color and trans women, are invisible.

And because of expectations about gender and age, young women with health issues must often deal with bias in their careers and personal lives. Not only do they feel pressured to seem perfect and youthful, they also find themselves amid labyrinthine obstacles in a culture that has one narrow idea of womanhood.

Lent Hirsch weaves her own harrowing experiences together with stories from other women, perspectives from sociologists on structural inequality, and insights from neuroscientists on misogyny in health research. She shows how health issues and disabilities amplify what women in general already confront: warped beauty standards, workplace sexism, worries about romantic partners, and mistrust of their own bodies. By shining a light on this hidden demographic, Lent Hirsch explores the challenges that all women face.

Michele Lent Hirsch is a writer and editor who specializes in science, gender, and health. Her nonfiction has appeared in or on the Atlantic, the Guardian, Smithsonian, Psychology Today, and Consumer Reports, among other outlets, and her poetry in the Bellevue Literary Review and Rattle. She has taught journalism at Manhattanville College, conducted research as a writer-in-residence at the New York Public Library, and been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. A native New Yorker, she is also a member of Columbia University's Neuwrite network, a selective group of writers and scientists.
Available products
Book

Published 2018-02-27 by Beacon Press

Book

Published 2018-02-27 by Beacon Press

Comments

24 AMAZING NEW FEMINIST BOOKS COMING IN 2018 - Young women with serious illness are one of the most overlooked populations in American society and one of the most ignored groups in our medical system. Weaving together patient interviews, insights from scientists on the study of gender and illness, and her own harrowing medical story, Hirsch exposes just how much gender norms hurt women who are already hurting, and how sexism prevails both in relationships and at the doctor's office.

I know what it means to work really hard to conceal the pain, struggle, and heartache in one's life, to appear 'fine' just for the sake of other people. Because the reality of my life might have made others momentarily uncomfortable, I'd hide my own discomfort. It's a hard habit to break and one that women have become adept at, one that is reinforced in the way our society treats, talks about, and engages with women who are ill or struggling. Thank you, Michele, for freeing us from the burden of being fine and shining a light on all the hidden pain women have been working so hard to conceal.

It is an untapped... area for advice that Hirsch covers with relatability, grace, and empathy.