The shadow of dementia: Listening to undecidability in ethnographic interviews with persons suspecting possible dementia

IF 1.8 3区 社会学 Q2 GERONTOLOGY Journal of Aging Studies Pub Date : 2023-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jaging.2023.101156
Shvat Eilat
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Abstract

Even before a diagnosis of dementia, people may negotiate in their everyday lives the fears and suspicions about the possibility of a future with dementia. My field of research involves JewishIsraeli older adult individuals who suspect that they are beginning to lose their memory, but before seeking out a formal diagnosis—and when not seeking a diagnosis at all is an equal possibility. By distinguishing their experience of suspecting possible dementia from this of living with dementia, I attempt to illuminate the social, bio-diagnostic and cultural shadows of dementia hovering in the background of their everyday experience. I begin by shedding light on the ethical and methodological context of my specific field in Israel. I next reflect upon the concept of “shadow,” that is constituted within and reflecting the assemblages of lurking presences accompanying my interlocutors' daily negotiations of the possibility of dementia. I then situate their lived experiences, as well as my ethnographic engagement with them, in the context of the prevailing cultural and social moralities surrounding this possibility. Finally, I show how a negotiation of the place that this shadow occupies in their lives arises in the encounter with the ethnographer. This first account of people before diagnosis and not through the diagnostic event, while keeping the space for deciding about a possible future of diagnosis open, can contribute to the understanding of undecidability as an ethical stance in ethnography, incorporating the suspension of the need to order realities through the imperatives of a diagnosis of dementia. Further, understanding these mundane negotiations with these shadows can help us allow more space for uncertainty and unpredictability as legitimate forms of living with dementia.

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痴呆症的阴影:在对怀疑可能患有痴呆症的人的民族志采访中倾听不确定性
甚至在被诊断为痴呆症之前,人们就可能在日常生活中协商对未来痴呆症可能性的恐惧和怀疑。我的研究领域涉及犹太裔以色列老年人,他们怀疑自己开始失忆,但在寻求正式诊断之前——当根本不寻求诊断是同样的可能性时。通过将他们怀疑可能患有痴呆症的经历与痴呆症患者的经历区分开来,我试图阐明痴呆症的社会、生物诊断和文化阴影笼罩在他们日常经历的背景中。我首先阐述了我在以色列的具体领域的伦理和方法背景。接下来,我会思考“阴影”的概念,它是在我的对话者每天就痴呆症的可能性进行谈判时,潜伏的存在的集合中构成的,并反映了这些集合。然后,我将他们的生活经历,以及我与他们的民族志接触,置于围绕这种可能性的主流文化和社会道德的背景下。最后,我展示了这种阴影在他们生活中所占据的位置是如何在与民族志学家的相遇中产生的。这种在诊断之前而不是通过诊断事件对人的第一次描述,同时保持了决定诊断未来可能的空间,有助于理解民族志中的不可决定性作为一种伦理立场,通过痴呆症诊断的必要性来暂停对现实的需求。此外,理解这些带有阴影的平凡谈判可以帮助我们为不确定性和不可预测性留出更多空间,使其成为痴呆症患者的合法生活形式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
17.40%
发文量
70
审稿时长
50 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Aging Studies features scholarly papers offering new interpretations that challenge existing theory and empirical work. Articles need not deal with the field of aging as a whole, but with any defensibly relevant topic pertinent to the aging experience and related to the broad concerns and subject matter of the social and behavioral sciences and the humanities. The journal emphasizes innovations and critique - new directions in general - regardless of theoretical or methodological orientation or academic discipline. Critical, empirical, or theoretical contributions are welcome.
期刊最新文献
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