Anticipatory grief in dementia : An ethnographic study of loss and connection

Article indépendant

LEMOS DEKKER, Natashe

In this article, I address the experiences of family members of people with dementia, as they expressed the sensation of gradually losing the person with dementia. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in nursing homes in the Netherlands, and contributing to the anthropology of grief, I explore the co-existence of experiences of anticipatory grief and manifestations of care to maintain meaningful relations. I show how my interlocutors adapted to changing circumstances as the disease progressed, and in so doing found new ways to relate, as well as prepared for future losses and the expected end of life. I argue that anticipatory grief is temporal and relational, encompassing both present and future losses, and involving a continuous negotiation between the loss and the continuing relationship. I underscore the entanglement of loss and connection, showing how both exist parallel to, and may emerge from one another, and demonstrating how an anthropological approach to anticipatory grief can reveal the nuanced and equivocal character of experiences of illness and at the end of life.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11013-022-09792-3

Voir la revue «Culture, medicine and psychiatry»

Autres numéros de la revue «Culture, medicine and psychiatry»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Moral frames for lives worth living : managin...

Article indépendant | LEMOS DEKKER, Natashe | DEATH STUDIES | n°5 | vol.42

Narratives that frame the end of life with dementia as undignified reveal moral claims on which lives are considered worth living. These claims are deeply rooted in the medicalization of death and its appeal to dignity. Drawing fr...

Moral frames for lives worth living : managin...

Article indépendant | LEMOS DEKKER, Natashe | DEATH STUDIES | n°5 | vol.42

Narratives that frame the end of life with dementia as undignified reveal moral claims on which lives are considered worth living. These claims are deeply rooted in the medicalization of death and its appeal to dignity. Drawing fr...

Anticipatory grief in dementia : An ethnograp...

Article | LEMOS DEKKER, Natashe | Culture, medicine and psychiatry

In this article, I address the experiences of family members of people with dementia, as they expressed the sensation of gradually losing the person with dementia. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in nursing homes in the Netherland...

De la même série

Feeling seen, being heard : perspectives of p...

Article indépendant | PRONK, Rosalie | Culture, medicine and psychiatry

Physician-assisted death (PAD) for patients suffering from a mental illness is allowed in the Netherlands under certain conditions but is a very controversial topic, mainly discussed by ethicists and physicians. The voice of the p...

What about us? Experiences of relatives regar...

Article indépendant | PRONK, Rosalie | Culture, medicine and psychiatry

Physician-assisted death (PAD) for patients suffering from mental illness is legally permitted in the Netherlands. Although patients' relatives are not entrusted with a legal role, former research revealed that physicians take int...

Anticipatory grief in dementia : An ethnograp...

Article indépendant | LEMOS DEKKER, Natashe | Culture, medicine and psychiatry

In this article, I address the experiences of family members of people with dementia, as they expressed the sensation of gradually losing the person with dementia. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in nursing homes in the Netherland...

Beauvoir, Ernaux, and me : on age, disability...

Article indépendant | MANN, Thomas J. | Culture, medicine and psychiatry

Can the fraught relation between disability and aging ever become untangled? What is the place of the catastrophically disabled in a time when giving voice and being seen are significant lodestars of political activism? And what b...

Chargement des enrichissements...