Full Description
Gothic Dementia: Troubled Minds in Gothic Timelines introduces Gothic studies as a valuable lens through which to critically consider how we think about dementia. It argues that the Gothic's foundational narrative techniques can be useful tools to approach dementia symptoms that share similar traits and behaviours, such as chronological confusion, fragmentation, cyclical storytelling, repetition, unreliable narrators, unstable identities, uncanny behaviours and Otherness. If we can navigate these challenging narrative elements in literature, can we navigate similar challenging dementia signs using interpretive strategies? Gothic Dementia considers this question in two ways: (1) through Gothic literary elements that correlate to characteristics of dementia and (2) through contentious horror film depictions of characters with dementia and their caregivers. Reading gothic works and horror films within the context of dementia studies and vice versa can contribute valuable insights into a feared disease that threatens the core of who we imagine ourselves to be.
Contents
1. Introduction: gothic rhetorics of cognitive dis-ease; 2. Cycles of fear: fragmentation and temporal confusion; 3. Ageing supernaturally: dementia in immortality; 4. Lost selves: the demon in dementia; 5. Uncanny connections: care givers and takers.



