Alzheimer’s Disease in Contemporary Literature and Culture

Award Number
AH/E00041X/1
Programme
Research Grant
Status / Stage
Completed
Dates
1 January 2007 -
30 March 2007
Duration (calculated)
00 years 02 months
Funder(s)
AHRC
Funding Amount
£18,331.00
Funder/Grant study page
AHRC
Contracted Centre
Manchester Metropolitan University
Principal Investigator
Lucy Burke
PI Contact
l.burke@mmu.ac.uk
PI ORCID
http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9870-5118
WHO Catergories
Models across the continuum of care
Disease Type
Alzheimer's Disease (AD)

CPEC Review Info
Reference ID798
ResearcherReside Team
Published24/07/2023

Data

Award NumberAH/E00041X/1
Status / StageCompleted
Start Date20070101
End Date20070330
Duration (calculated) 00 years 02 months
Funder/Grant study pageAHRC
Contracted CentreManchester Metropolitan University
Funding Amount£18,331.00

Abstract

This research explores the ways in which Alzheimer’s Disease and other related forms of dementia (for instance, vascular dementia and Huntington’s Disease) are represented in a range of recent novels, poems, plays, and forms of life writing or ‘pathography’ (illness narratives by those with the disease or by members of their family/carers). My chosen texts include: Michael Ignatieff’s Scar Tissue (1993), John Bayley’s Iris (1998) and Iris and the Friends (1999), Linda Grant’s, Remind Me Who I am Again (1998), Ian McEwan’s novels Atonement (2001) and Saturday (2005); Chuck Palahniuk’s Choke (2001), Tony Harrison’s Black Daisies for the Bride (1993).

Current research on Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias is largely confined to medical and related disciplines, including psychological and sociological accounts of aging, dying, death and grief, and the increasingly controversial field of bioethics. Yet the growing frequency with which Alzheimer’s disease appears in imaginative literature and life writing underlines the importance of engaging with it from a literary critical perspective. The study argues that imaginative literature and forms of life writing have a specific role to play in relation to our understanding of the ethical dilemmas raised by these diseases, and to an understanding of both the individual and the cultural dimensions of illness, disease and dying. Through a close analysis of narrative discourse, metaphor and literary techniques, this study considers the specific ways in which literary, biographical and autobiographical constructions of Alzheimer’s disease (and related forms of dementia) raise and shape ethical debate about what it means to be human, and how we conceptualise the limits of human subjectivity; particularly the point at which writers construct a boundary between selfhood and its apparent eradication in an insidious, dementing illness such as Alzheimer’s. It also considers the ways in which writers construe the relationship between the individual illness experience and wider cultural co-ordinates, particularly the ways in which the effects of Alzheimer’s disease impact upon the production and reproduction of cultural memory, practices of cultural memorialisation and notions of cultural heritage, cultural belonging and cultural dislocation or ‘forgetting’.

The research makes an argument for the significance of literary form and literary language in encapsulating the experiences of illness and dying with a complexity that is often lacking in standard bio-ethical case studies and demonstrates that literary representations of these diseases are not simply of reflective of prevailing medical and cultural discourses around illness, dying and death, but have a constitutive role to play in shaping our understanding of and responses to these realities. Its aim is further to develop the dialogue between various disciplinary fields; bioethics, medical humanities, the cognitive sciences, cultural theory, and literary criticism and to contribute to subject-specific and inter-disciplinary knowledge about the social and cultural meanings of diseases such as Alzheimer’s.

Aims

The study argues that imaginative literature and forms of life writing have a specific role to play in relation to our understanding of the ethical dilemmas raised by these diseases, and to an understanding of both the individual and the cultural dimensions of illness, disease and dying.