| Literature DB >> 31713087 |
Abstract
The capacity to feel and express themselves in response to worldly surroundings is a defining feature of who a person living with dementia is, and can have profound effects on the ways in which they think, act and express creativity. Drawing on a year of intensive collaborative work with residents living with dementia in an Orthodox Jewish care home in London, I extend our perceptions and understandings of how a couple experiences their day-to-day lives, with particular attention paid to their affective practice in creativity. I demonstrate how the affective creativity of the couple emerges, circulates, and transforms as a spouse's dementia develops, whilst feeling bodies continuously (re)make relations and familiarize themselves with the immediate surroundings through the making of artworks.Entities:
Keywords: Affective practice; Arts activities; Co-production; Couple; Creativity; Feeling body
Year: 2020 PMID: 31713087 DOI: 10.1007/s11013-019-09662-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cult Med Psychiatry ISSN: 0165-005X