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- Title
An autoethnography on shifting relationships between a daughter, her mother and Alzheimer’s dementia (in any order).
- Authors
Malthouse, Marina
- Abstract
This is an autoethnography written by a daughter whose mother developed Alzheimer’s dementia a few years ago. In the writing, a shifting nature of relationships is described between the daughter, her mother and the dementia. As a form of self-narrative where the author is placed within a social context, the writing within the autoethnography follows Ellis (1999) who suggests seeing through a wide-angled lens. This lens has been focused outwards and inwards with the aim of creating an evocative text about shifting relationships and dementia. In its construction, meaning has been extracted from these experiences that help the author to stay aware of these relationships that can shift even further as her mother’s dementia moves on in time.
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation; ADULT children; ALZHEIMER'S disease; ATTITUDE (Psychology); PERSONAL beauty; BODY image; COGNITION; EXPERIENCE; FAMILIES; MEMORY; MENTAL illness; PARENT-child relationships; SELF-perception; SPOUSES; ETHNOLOGY research; NARRATIVES; BURDEN of care; DISEASE progression; SYMPTOMS; PSYCHOLOGY
- Publication
Dementia (14713012), 2011, Vol 10, Issue 2, p249
- ISSN
1471-3012
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1177/1471301211407626