This paper considers what is at stake in telling the story of another’s illness and in taking on the history of another’s dementia as part of one’s own life narrative. Through a close analysis of Michael Ignatieff’s Scar Tissue, it explores the ways in which writing about the experience of caring for a parent with dementia speaks to the intersubjective dimensions of selfhood but also complicates the ways in which the very concept of intersubjectivity is often evoked within scholarship on personhood. It argues that an engagement with this kind of narrative is illuminating in this context because it exposes some of the emotional, memorial, and ethical difficulties that attend the experience of writing for and about another person when he or s...
In this paper, the author responds to the Moules and Estefan (2018) Editorial “Watching My Mother Di...
With an undeniably compassionate and innocent voice, two-time Lexia author Tyler Morris explores Alz...
One goal of this paper is to argue that autobiographical memories are extended and distributed acros...
This paper considers what is at stake in telling the story of another’s illness and in taking on the...
It seems obvious that one of the harms that dementia does is to undermine the person’s identity. One...
The authors revisit the troubling discourse surrounding the diagnosis of dementia. A critique of the...
Obituaries and other accounts of well-known people at their death offer a narrative defining identit...
In today’s context of rapid socio-political changes, with deepening ethnic and religious conflicts o...
Stories about dementia have ethical implications. Both cultural and fictional narratives about this ...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)The ‘loss of self’ trope is a pervasive sho...
abstract: Alzheimer's disease and related dementias are a growing issue in the United States. While ...
[À l'origine dans / Was originally part of : Thèses et mémoires - FAS - Département de littérature c...
Abstract This article describes an ongoing interdisciplinary research study1 with community-dwelling...
The thesis was designed to gain insight into how Alzheimer’s disease influences selfhood from first-...
This dissertation examines cultural and literary responses to dementia in narratives dealing with th...
In this paper, the author responds to the Moules and Estefan (2018) Editorial “Watching My Mother Di...
With an undeniably compassionate and innocent voice, two-time Lexia author Tyler Morris explores Alz...
One goal of this paper is to argue that autobiographical memories are extended and distributed acros...
This paper considers what is at stake in telling the story of another’s illness and in taking on the...
It seems obvious that one of the harms that dementia does is to undermine the person’s identity. One...
The authors revisit the troubling discourse surrounding the diagnosis of dementia. A critique of the...
Obituaries and other accounts of well-known people at their death offer a narrative defining identit...
In today’s context of rapid socio-political changes, with deepening ethnic and religious conflicts o...
Stories about dementia have ethical implications. Both cultural and fictional narratives about this ...
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)The ‘loss of self’ trope is a pervasive sho...
abstract: Alzheimer's disease and related dementias are a growing issue in the United States. While ...
[À l'origine dans / Was originally part of : Thèses et mémoires - FAS - Département de littérature c...
Abstract This article describes an ongoing interdisciplinary research study1 with community-dwelling...
The thesis was designed to gain insight into how Alzheimer’s disease influences selfhood from first-...
This dissertation examines cultural and literary responses to dementia in narratives dealing with th...
In this paper, the author responds to the Moules and Estefan (2018) Editorial “Watching My Mother Di...
With an undeniably compassionate and innocent voice, two-time Lexia author Tyler Morris explores Alz...
One goal of this paper is to argue that autobiographical memories are extended and distributed acros...