Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)The ‘loss of self’ trope is a pervasive shorthand for the prototypical process of Alzheimer's disease (AD) in the popular imagination. Turned into an effect of disease, the disappearance of the self accommodates a biomedical story of progressive deterioration and the further medicalization of AD, a process which has been storied as an organic pathology affecting the brain or, more recently, a matter of genetic calamity. This biomedical discourse of AD provides a generic framework for the disease and is reproduced in its illness narratives. The disappearance of self is a mythic element in AD narratives; it necessarily assumes the existence of a singular and coherent entity which, from ...
According to research applying a social constructionist perspective, the sense of self is not lost i...
Taking as its starting point the value of literary studies to work on ageing, this paper explores ...
Loss of self is widely regarded to be a consequence of dementia, and this perceived loss presents a ...
AbstractThe World Alzheimer Report (2014) stated that 44 million people worldwide suffer from AD. Pe...
The thesis was designed to gain insight into how Alzheimer’s disease influences selfhood from first-...
This paper considers what is at stake in telling the story of another’s illness and in taking on the...
This paper considers what is at stake in telling the story of another’s illness and in taking on the...
This paper argues for an expansion of the discourse on selfhood to include embodied self-expression—...
abstract: Alzheimer's disease and related dementias are a growing issue in the United States. While ...
In this article, I use the work of Alfred North Whitehead and Isabelle Stengers to challenge the bio...
peer reviewedThe Self is a complex construct encompassing distinct components, including episodic an...
There is a confusing diversity of conceptions of ‘the self’ in philosophical, psychological, psychia...
According to research applying a social constructionist perspective, the sense of self is not lost i...
While literature and popular culture have sought to understand Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) in terms fra...
AbstractFutures of Forgetting: Alzheimer’s Disease and the Lively Politics of AnticipationbyJennifer...
According to research applying a social constructionist perspective, the sense of self is not lost i...
Taking as its starting point the value of literary studies to work on ageing, this paper explores ...
Loss of self is widely regarded to be a consequence of dementia, and this perceived loss presents a ...
AbstractThe World Alzheimer Report (2014) stated that 44 million people worldwide suffer from AD. Pe...
The thesis was designed to gain insight into how Alzheimer’s disease influences selfhood from first-...
This paper considers what is at stake in telling the story of another’s illness and in taking on the...
This paper considers what is at stake in telling the story of another’s illness and in taking on the...
This paper argues for an expansion of the discourse on selfhood to include embodied self-expression—...
abstract: Alzheimer's disease and related dementias are a growing issue in the United States. While ...
In this article, I use the work of Alfred North Whitehead and Isabelle Stengers to challenge the bio...
peer reviewedThe Self is a complex construct encompassing distinct components, including episodic an...
There is a confusing diversity of conceptions of ‘the self’ in philosophical, psychological, psychia...
According to research applying a social constructionist perspective, the sense of self is not lost i...
While literature and popular culture have sought to understand Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) in terms fra...
AbstractFutures of Forgetting: Alzheimer’s Disease and the Lively Politics of AnticipationbyJennifer...
According to research applying a social constructionist perspective, the sense of self is not lost i...
Taking as its starting point the value of literary studies to work on ageing, this paper explores ...
Loss of self is widely regarded to be a consequence of dementia, and this perceived loss presents a ...