你自己有罪的故事

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERATURE, AFRICAN, AUSTRALIAN, CANADIAN
S. Chivers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

人口老龄化的启示基于对痴呆症患者数量增加的成本和影响的负面假设。这种话语强调了治愈的愿望,并放大了护理成本,同时忽视了痴呆症更广泛的文化含义。文学描绘提供了一个机会,可以拓宽形象景观,提出人们对老龄化意味着什么的问题。根据年龄研究,这本对David Chariandy的《Soucouyant》的情境化细读为思考全球老龄化、记忆力丧失的影响以及护理工作如何影响人际关系提供了另一种方式。这部小说的叙述者从未透露姓名,他编造了一些“有罪的故事”,让他了解母亲的痴呆症,但没有充分说明母亲的朋友克里斯托弗夫人几十年来所做的护理工作。因此,这部小说通过展现照顾关系、文化记忆和痴呆症之间的联系,与老龄化的政治经济学有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Your own guilty story
Apocalyptic visions of an aging population rest on negative assumptions about the costs and effects of increasing numbers of people with dementia. Such discourse emphasizes a desire for cure and amplifies the costs of care while ignoring the broader cultural implications of dementia. Literary portrayals offer the opportunity to broaden the figurative landscape to raise questions about what it means for a population to age. Drawing on age studies, this contextualized close reading of David Chariandy’s Soucouyant offers another way to think about global aging, the implications of memory loss, and how care work affects relationships. The novel’s never named narrator concocts “guilty stories” that orient him to his mother’s dementia but do not adequately account for the care work his mother’s friend, Mrs. Christopher, has done over decades. Thus, the novel pertains to the political economy of aging by surfacing connections among care relations, cultural memory, and dementia.
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来源期刊
CANADIAN LITERATURE
CANADIAN LITERATURE LITERATURE, AFRICAN, AUSTRALIAN, CANADIAN-
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
34
期刊介绍: Canadian Literature aims to foster a wider academic interest in the Canadian literary field, and publishes a wide range of material from Canadian and international scholars, writers, and poets. Each issue contains a variety of critical articles, an extensive book reviews section, and a selection of original poetry.
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