John McCain: Cancer as Combatant
Mortality can either make you bookish, or drive you into the arms of the spiritual. But in a more distinct sense, it can
render you prone to attribute to nature mysterious powers of a human quality. To do so is seen as the first step on the
road to defeating it, even if nothing of the sort will happen.
The point is easy enough to fathom: a disease described as an enemy within, wasting the body, taking life out of it as
the accessory of the Grim Reaper, much like an occupying army that rapaciously drains a territory. The military
metaphor, for that reason, enlists humanity in a mission to combat, a call to arms.
And so, when we see the responses to the brain cancer diagnosis of veteran Arizona Senator John McCain, we see the
forces of mankind arraigning themselves against the forces of cancer, whose cells, like the soldiers of a medieval
khanate, threaten life and limb.
In the aftermath of the announcement, McCain was featured in footage and accounts suggesting that he had booked a
one-way ticket to the morgue, but would make a good fist of it. The leitmotif here was that of the fighter, the battler,
the warrior. But instead of battling the North Vietnamese (yes, as a wounded pilot, imagery of a broken body was
screened), he was facing an adversary more formidable, more insidious.
Well wishing notes were sent, and in a digital age, these do not come in posted cards but social media outpourings.
“Cancer,” tweeted President Barack Obama, “doesn’t know what it’s up against. Give it hell, John.” The point being made
after describing McCain as “an American hero & one of the bravest fighters I’ve ever known.”
The first figure of prominence to rhetorically see cancer as a target (much like North Vietnam) was President Richard
Nixon. His address on signing the National Cancer Act of 1971 was instructively belligerent. In declaring the act as
possibly “the most significant action taken during this Administration” he considered the predations of the disease as
so significant, it had claimed more lives each year “than all the Americans who lost their lives in World War II.”
Cancer had to be subjugated, battered, defeated, conquered. Anger, to use a remark by Virgil, supplies the arms. A
massive mobilisation, both voluntary and otherwise, had to be undertaken in something akin to a millenarian mission,
whose ultimate apocalypse entailed victory for the human body. “Five-sixths of what we do in America is produced by what
people do in their voluntary and cooperative capacities.”
The language of conflict has duly peppered usage in medical and patient-speak. As a study published in BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care found, surveyed patients with cancer “use both Violence metaphors and Journey metaphors approximately
1.5 times per 1000 words to describe their illness experience”.
There are no anthropomorphic qualities to this, other than to appreciate that to see a patient battling cancer is more
akin to a civil war, an internal revolt which entails a cancellation or deletion of the self. “Cancer has arisen within
my own body, from my own cells,” the late Kate Granger noted with unnerving accuracy. “To fight it would be ‘waging a
war’ on myself.” Ditto for Xeni Jardin: cancer “is my own cells going rogue. Suddenly, all the combat language was
confusing.”
The corollary of such language entails the necessity to fight a nasty familial enemy breaking down the door. Your
efforts will be evaluated; your counter-offensive duly assessed in terms of courage, focus and determination. No room
for shirking, or going wobbly before those demon cells. The enemy within must be quashed.
Susan Sontag, in Illness as Metaphor (1978), brought the lens of demystification to bear upon cancer, seeing analogies
with the previous, death-sentencing diagnosis: tuberculosis. The focus, rather, should be on treatment itself, rather
than the evasions, the dressing ups, the exotic linguistic apparatus that does a good deal to falsify conditions.
“Cancer patients,” noted Sontag, “are lied to, not just because the disease is (or is thought to be) a death sentence,
but because it is felt to be obscene – in the original meaning of that word: ill-omened, abominable, repugnant to the
senses.”
Life is given to be ended, and the intervening battles are simple pit stops before the ultimate departure. Attitudes
along the way are everything. There are the endless delaying tactics, therapeutic models, suggestions on wellness and
the good life. But the object is undeniable, and the reaper will not be cheated.
One is left with that brief interregnum in the cosmos, one which should not entail, as the authors of the BMJ study
suggest, an unequivocal rejection of violence metaphors. Nor should it entail the opposite: the undue flattery accorded
to “journey” metaphors, the chest-thumping self-congratulatory note of victory once the disease abates. The cold fingers
of realism are hard to be free off: we can either accept the inevitable dissolution of the life force into the universe,
or view it as a terrifying exit into an insentient oblivion.
Dr. Binoy Kampmark was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He lectures at RMIT University, Melbourne.