According to the Arts

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Month: August 2019

Illness as Change

Illness as Change

What I and Others Say

According to the art: The change illness can cause can be barely noticeable, hugely disruptive, or something along the range in between. But, change illness often causes. The novelist and poet, Reynolds Price wrote about the big change illness caused him.

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The Faraway NearbyApricots, Mother’s Dementia, then Life Emergency

The Faraway Nearby
Apricots, Mother’s Dementia, then Life Emergency

What These Works Say

According to the art: Through fourteen stories, Solnit tells of her experiences with her mother’s dementia, a friend’s cancer, and her own cancer. Some stories about these experiences and other stories are about other events in her life at the same time. She provides thoughts on experiencing particular illnesses, the American health care, and how illness figures in the stories of our lives.

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Illness as Experience

Illness as Experience

What I and Others Say

According to the art: The illness experience is, overall, and as described by Kleinman, “like the volcano: it does not go away. It menaces. It erupts. It is out of control. One damned thing follows another.”

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Illness as Loss

Illness as Loss

What I and Others Say

According to the art: Illness as loss refers the types of losses that contribute to illness as it is distinguished from disease and sickness and can include loss of confidence, loss of control, loss of innocence, and loss of omnipotence, all of which are related to some degree.

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Dementia Experience: The Biomedical and the Literary (LaPlante)

Dementia Experience:
The Biomedical and the Literary (LaPlante)

Projects So That I Can Say More

According to the art: Here are excerpts from the novel Turn of Mind that extend or elaborate on classic biomedical explanations of what people experience with dementia.

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Turn of MindThe Mystery of Dementia Wrapped in a Mystery

Turn of Mind
The Mystery of Dementia Wrapped in a Mystery

What These Works Say

According to the art: This murder mystery features a prime suspect with Alzheimer’s disease and who serves as the narrator for most of the book. The suspect’s disease is advanced enough to make her an unreliable narrator and witness. Because of the author’s personal interest in dementia, the novel offers ideas on how people experience it amid complex circumstances. The author also imagines an end stage of dementia that may be more pleasant than common perceptions.

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It’s All Right–He Only Died

It’s All Right–He Only Died

What These Works Say

According to the art: In a 655-word short story, Raymond Chandler captures a range of problems in American health care of the late 1950s. Readers in the 2010s will recognize a similar set of problems.

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