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Books > Health, Home & Family > Family & health > Family & other relationships > Intergenerational relationships
Breast cancer shocked her into asking how she would cope. What
resources of body and mind had she inherited from her parents?
'Self-Portrait with Parents' combines original research with a
personal understanding of Tyerman's upbringing and its
consequences. Looking back at her adolescence and exploring the
largely unknown lives of her parents has helped her not only to
recover from recurrent breast cancer but also to resist the
powerfully negative reactions still common today. Tyerman's father,
Donald, Oxford scholar from the impoverished north-east, wartime
Fleet Street hero and BBC broadcaster, deputy editor of 'The Times'
and editor of the 'Economist', endured high responsibility without
real power. Her mother, Margaret Gray, gave up several careers to
look after five children and a husband disabled by childhood polio.
Tyerman grew up with a father who couldn't walk. Yet his passion
was athletics. Her parents were indifferent to gender distinctions
while the outside world valued Fifties femininity. This was hard
for Tyerman then but now liberates her to resist assumptions about
a loss of womanhood and sexuality.
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