Description
“An intriguing examination of an important health issue…[I]nformed general readers will find it useful.”– “Library Journal”
“Based on an exceptional range of qualitative data, Living with Alzheimers brilliantly illuminates how a primarily biomedical approach to memory loss shapes the identities and experiences of millions of newly minted patients. Equally, Renée Beard alerts us to how counter-narratives can potentially liberate the marginalized voices of those dealing with questionable diagnoses of cognitive impairment. Finely organized and conceptually rich, this book should be standard reading for anyone puzzling through the confounding distinction between normal aging and pathological forgetfulness.”–David Karp, author of Speaking of Sadness
“In this thorough and critical book, Renee Beard explores the medicalization, culture and experience of Alzheimers Disease in a breadth rarely encountered in sociological analyses of illness. This work should become a benchmark in the social studies of Alzheimers for a long time.”–Peter Conrad, author of The Medicalization of Society
“Living with Alzheimers is an important empirical contribution to illness narratives about people with memory problems or experiencing forgetfulness. I highly recommend it to scholars interested in the sociology of diagnosis, social studies of dementia, and the sociology of ageing.”– “Sociology of Health & Illness”
“Provides an insightful, compelling and timely understanding into the lives of people with memory problems living in a society where cognitive function is still implicitly connected to how we articulate our place in the world . . . highly recommend to scholars interested in the sociology of diagnosis, social studies of dementia, and the sociology of ageing.”An exemplary study, important for the sociologies of health and illness, social movements, disability studies, aging, and identity formation”– “American Journal of Sociology”
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