The concept of the stiff upper lip stands as a cultural metaphor for the repression and figurative ¿biting back¿ of traumatic experience, particularly in military contexts. For men born in the first half of the 20th century, maintaining a stiff upper lip involved the ability to exert high levels of cognitive control over the subjective, visceral and emotional domains of experience. In the most common forms of dementia, which affect at least one in five men now in their 80s and 90s, this cognitive control is increasingly lost. One result is that, with the onset of dementia, men who have in the intervening years maintained a relative silence about their wartime experiences begin to disclose detailed memories of such events, in some cases fo...
In the autumn of 2014, as Britain embarked on four years of activities to commemorate and mark the c...
Media coverage of dementia can influence public and professional attitudes towards the syndrome, sha...
This article contributes to debates about the cat-egory “dementia, ” which until recently has been d...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open programme and is available on www....
Memory loss is not always viewed purely as a contingent neurobiological process present in an ageing...
Past research has documented the influences that 'traumatic' memories of war have on older people's ...
This article asks what the reasons are for the frequent linking of the image of the Holocaust with t...
We report on a unique project which utilised oral history methodology undertaken with four people wi...
Focussing on three recent British film and television crime dramas, Mr Holmes, The Fear and the Engl...
This article contributes to debates about the category “dementia,” which until recently has been dom...
Materials have long been used by individuals reflecting on personal histories, and researchers have ...
About the book: Original articles by 40 authors on five continents, demonstrating the global ...
This paper considers a number of problems which arose after the publication of my earlier work entit...
This edited volume analyses how forms of individual and societal forgetting, as envisaged in contemp...
In the autumn of 2014, as Britain embarked on four years of activities to commemorate and mark the c...
In the autumn of 2014, as Britain embarked on four years of activities to commemorate and mark the c...
Media coverage of dementia can influence public and professional attitudes towards the syndrome, sha...
This article contributes to debates about the cat-egory “dementia, ” which until recently has been d...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open programme and is available on www....
Memory loss is not always viewed purely as a contingent neurobiological process present in an ageing...
Past research has documented the influences that 'traumatic' memories of war have on older people's ...
This article asks what the reasons are for the frequent linking of the image of the Holocaust with t...
We report on a unique project which utilised oral history methodology undertaken with four people wi...
Focussing on three recent British film and television crime dramas, Mr Holmes, The Fear and the Engl...
This article contributes to debates about the category “dementia,” which until recently has been dom...
Materials have long been used by individuals reflecting on personal histories, and researchers have ...
About the book: Original articles by 40 authors on five continents, demonstrating the global ...
This paper considers a number of problems which arose after the publication of my earlier work entit...
This edited volume analyses how forms of individual and societal forgetting, as envisaged in contemp...
In the autumn of 2014, as Britain embarked on four years of activities to commemorate and mark the c...
In the autumn of 2014, as Britain embarked on four years of activities to commemorate and mark the c...
Media coverage of dementia can influence public and professional attitudes towards the syndrome, sha...
This article contributes to debates about the cat-egory “dementia, ” which until recently has been d...