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STORIES AND EMBODIED MEMORIES IN DEMENTIA Lars-Christer Hydén, PhD Center for Dementia Research (CEDER) Linköping University, Sweden. CEDER - Center for Dementia Research. Interest in people with dementia as storytellers. Dementia:
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STORIES AND EMBODIED MEMORIES IN DEMENTIA Lars-Christer Hydén, PhD Center for Dementia Research (CEDER) Linköping University, Sweden CEDER - Center for Dementia Research
Interest in people with dementia as storytellers.
Dementia: a brain disease first resulting in linguistic and cognitive challenges - later on more functions are involved - and eventually resulting in death. A disease with many faces and causes.
Storytelling: * is ubiquitous; * is important in presenting and negotiating identities; * important in understanding other persons and the world.
Research on dementia invites us to re-think some theoretical issues: (1) what is memory? (2) what does ”losing memory” mean and imply?
Episodic memory Event representation Semantic memory Words & linguistic constructions Talk: linguistic representation of retrieved events
Embodiment: (1) Communicative body (2) ”Embodied cognition” and a combinations of these
An example Laura * 52 years old * early on-set dementia * two children * divorced
The interview Thematic: - diagnosis - life history - present life
The interview situation * In Laura’s home * Social support person present, and * Two interviewers Video recorded
The start of the sequence: Laura is telling about where she has been living - as part of that story she tells about separating from her husband and about her son.
Laura: well my son ehh lives with his father and we all lived there I1: mm Laura: we separated and then we had different he came to me and then it was empty I2: yes Laura: and then I2: [alternate residence] Laura: [we did this for a while]
Laura: well my son ehh (1,5s) lives with his father (2s) and we all lived there (0.75s) I1: mm Laura: we separated and then (1,5s) we had different (2s) he came to me (0.8) and then it was empty (0.5s) I2: yes Laura: and then (2.0s) I2: [alternate residence] Laura: [we did this for a while]
Laura: well my son ehh lives with his father and we all lived there I1: mm Laura: we separated and then we had different he came to me and then it was empty I2: yes Laura: and then I2: [alternate residence] Laura: [we did this for a while]
Build a case for incompleteness: * frequent in the interview * pauses quite long * grammatical constructions: lack of words that differentiate in events, situations and physical arrangements. Utterances are ’syncretic’.
Laura: well my son ehh Gestures: ((hands resting in knee - default)) Gaze: ((gaze directed towards I1))
Laura: well my son ehh Gestures: ((hands resting in knee - default)) Gaze: ((gaze directed towards I1)) Laura: lives with his father Laura: and w-we all lived there ((I1: mm)) Laura: w-we separated Gestures: ((raises both hands in outward movement))
Laura: well my son ehh Gestures: ((hands resting in knee - default)) Gaze: ((gaze directed towards I1)) Laura: lives with his father Laura: and w-we all lived there ((I1: mm)) Laura: w-we separated and Gestures: ((raises both hands in outward movement)) Laura:and then Gestures: ((join hands))
Laura: well my son ehh Gestures: ((hands resting in knee - default)) Gaze: ((gaze directed towards I1)) Laura: lives with his father Laura: and w-we all lived there ((I1: mm)) Laura: w-we separated Gestures: ((raises both hands in outward movement)) Laura:and then Gestures: ((join hands)) Laura: we had different Gestures: ((outward hand movements hands separated))
Laura: well my son ehh Gestures: ((hands resting in knee - default)) Gaze: ((gaze directed towards I1)) Laura: lives with his father Laura: and w-we all lived there ((I1: mm)) Laura: w-we separated Gestures: ((raises both hands in outward movement)) Laura:and then Gestures: ((join hands)) Laura: we had different Gestures: ((outward hand movements hands separated)) Laura: he came to me Gestures: ((right hand in to the body midline))
Laura: we had different Gestures: ((outward hand movements hands separated)) Laura: he came to me Gestures: ((right hand in to the body midline)) Laura: and then it was empty ((small laughter)) I2: yes Gestures: ((left hand in to body midline)) Gaze: ((shifts gaze to I2))
Laura: and then it was empty ((small laughter)) I2: yes Gestures: ((left hand in to body midline)) Gaze: ((shifts gaze to I2)) Laura: and then Gestures: ((right hand from right to midline => both hand to default position)) Gaze: ((shifts gaze to I1))
Laura: well my son ehh Gestures: ((hands resting in knee - default)) Gaze: ((gaze directed towards I1)) Laura: lives with his father Laura: and w-we all lived there ((I1: mm)) Laura: w-we separated and Gestures: ((raises both hands in outward movement)) Laura:then Gestures: ((join hands)) Laura: we had different Gestures: ((outward hand movements hands separated)) Laura: he came to me Gestures: ((right hand in to the body midline)) Laura: and then it was empty ((small laughter)) I2: yes Gestures: ((left hand in to body midline)) Gaze: ((shifts gaze to I2)) Laura: and then Gestures: ((right hand from right to midline => both hand to default position)) Gaze: ((shifts gaze to I1)) I2: [alternate residence] Laura: [we did this for a while] Gaze: ((shifts gaze to I2))
Sum up of analysis: * Gestures take on the functions of words;
Sum up of analysis: * Gestures take on the functions of words; * Complex gestures - events;
Sum up of analysis: * Gestures take on the functions of words; * Complex gestures - events; * Gestures connected to embodied experiences;
Sum up of analysis: * Gestures take on the functions of words; * Complex gestures - events; * Gestures connected to embodied experiences; * Gestures are ”syncretic”.
Conclusions * Indication that memories are not representations stored in an archive but rather bits and pieces of modular (embodied) experiences and patterns of experiences that can be re-created in a new situation.
Conclusions * Experiential fragments are not ”mapped” into linguistic expressions, but rather developed through various semiotic tools (language, gestures).
Conclusions * Dementia do not lead to erasure of ”memories” in the brain, but to loss of certain possibilities - and inventions of new possibilities.