II. Works on Anne Carson > E. Chapters in essay collections > II.E.2022.002
Guimarães, João Paulo; Jung, Daae; Hartung, Heike (Editor); Kunow, Rüdiger (Editor); Sweney, Matthew (Editor)
“Anne Carson, dementia and the negative self” in Ageing masculinities, Alzheimer’s and dementia narratives [electronic resource] Bloomsbury Studies in the Humanities, Ageing and Later Life London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2022, 91-102.
ISBN: 978-1-350-23063-7
Notes from Source: Heike Hartung (University of Graz, Austria) Rüdiger Kunow (Potsdam University, Germany) and Matthew Sweney (Palacký University Olomouc, Czech Republic): Introduction: Representational Paternalism? Alzheimer’s Narratives in Film and Fiction — 1. Michaela Schrage-Früh (National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland): Stories of Exile and Home — 2. João Paulo Guimarães (University College Dublin, Ireland) and Daae Jung (University at Buffalo, Canada): Anne Carson, Dementia and the Fragmented Self — 3. Katharina Fürholzer (University of Pennsylvania, USA): Forgotten Fatherhood — 4. Cintia Engel (University of Brasilia, Brazil) and Annette Leibing (University of Montreal, Canada): Male Dementia Care — 5. Raquel Medina (Aston University, UK): Memorizing the Past to fight Alzheimer’s Disease Oblivion — 6. Melinda Niehus-Kettler (University of Potsdam, Germany): Becoming One of the Others — 7. Martina Zimmermann (University of Frankfurt, Germany/King’s College London, UK): From a ‘Care-Free’ Distance? Adult Sons about their Ageing Parents — 8.Lisa-Nike Bühring (University of Gloucestershire, UK): The Significance of Individual Agency in the Life-Course — Narratives of Older German Men — 9. Stefan Horlacher and Franziska Röber (TU Dresden, Germany): ‘The Sweet Smell of Harmony’ — 10. Heike Hartung (University of Graz, Austria): Illness Memoirs, Ageing Masculinities and Care — 11. Teresa Requena-Pelegrí (Unversitat de Barcelona, Spain): Narratives of Parkinson’s Dementia and Masculinities — 12. Matthew Sweney (University of Graz, Austria): The Poetry of Dementia., “Bringing together insights from masculinity studies and age studies for the first time, this volume focuses on the gendered and relational perspectives in cultural representations of Alzheimer’s disease. In the cultural context of many societies, Alzheimer’s disease has come to represent the ‘dark side’ of longevity in the 21st century. While the dream of a long life has become a real possibility for many people, it has simultaneously given rise to new anxieties focused on cultural fears of ‘demented’ old age. In expert discourse as well as in personal accounts, Alzheimer’s has produced what might be called a ‘master narrative’ that limits representation and narration and questions traditional views of selfhood and human development. Combining a comparative and interdisciplinary approach with a gendered perspective, the essays in this volume engage with Alzheimer’s as a disease of ageing masculinities, drawing on representations of the disease in many different cultural contexts. Examining a broad range of source material, including memoir, film, poetry and prose fiction, this book looks at work from a wide range of authors, including Anne Carson, Philip Roth and Jonathan Franzen.”–
Subject Tags: Aging, Alzheimer’s disease, Cognition, Diseases, Gender, Literature, Masculinity, Medicine, Men, Mental illness, Negativity, Poetry, Psychoanalysis
References: I.A.2016.001, I.I.2019.001
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