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Das, Laboni and Sathyaraj Venkatesan. "“Inside Out of Mind”: Alternative realities, dementia and graphic medicine." Journal of Medical Humanities 45. (2024): 171–84. 
Added by: joachim (04/05/2024, 12:16)   Last edited by: joachim (04/05/2024, 12:21)
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.1007/s10912-023-09840-y
BibTeX citation key: Das2024
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Aliceheimer’s", Autobiography, Illness, Medicine, USA, Walrath. Dana
Creators: Das, Venkatesan
Collection: Journal of Medical Humanities
Views: 135/135
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Abstract
Graphic medicine, an interdisciplinary field situated at the crossroads of comics and healthcare, operates as a medium through which the intricate nature of experiences with illness can be articulated, challenging orthodox medical dogmatism in an engaging and accessible way. Combining the affordances of comics and the narrative power of storytelling, graphic medicine elucidates the socio-cultural stigmatization of dementia influenced by a multitude of discourses. Diverging from existing discourses that depict individuals with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) as zombies, brain-dead, or empty shells, graphic memoirs reconstruct these reductive notions and represent them as imaginative, productive, and perceptive. Taking these cues, the present paper close reads some sections of Dana Walrath’s (2016) Aliceheimer’s: Alzheimer’s Through the Looking Glass in order to demonstrate how graphic medicine reconceptualizes the preeminent hallucinatory experiences of her AD-afflicted mother, Alice, as visions. Walrath deploys collage art to epitomize Alice’s ordeal with AD. In particular, Walrath deploys thought-provoking fragments from Lewis Caroll’s Alice in Wonderland, strategically to proximate Alice’s experiences with AD and tackle the problem of dementia and sociality. Additionally, the paper explores how the text fosters interdependence, respect, and trust to recognize and restore Alice’s personhood. The paper concludes by discussing how Aliceheimer’s operates as an alternative paradigm beyond the confines of biomedical and cultural models of dementia through the use of lexical puissance.
  
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