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Listening to Dementia

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How dementia affects those living with the condition, their carers, and their advocacyIn Listening to Dementia, Emily K. Abel demonstrates that recognizing the voices of people with dementia can fu...
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  • 29 September 2026
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How dementia affects those living with the condition, their carers, and their advocacy

In Listening to Dementia, Emily K. Abel demonstrates that recognizing the voices of people with dementia can fundamentally alter our understanding of both their lived experience and the discourse surrounding their care. She focuses on the memoirs of twelve individuals living with the condition who became advocates on their own behalf. The authors challenge reigning understandings of dementia while operating within familiar cultural notions.

Abel addresses topics including the impact of stigma and discrimination on the lives of people with dementia, their portrayal in the vast advice literature for carers, the divergence between the views of carers and those of the people they care for, the reasons some people with dementia seek to end their lives before the disease reaches the final stage, and how dementia advocates react to carers’ attempts to manage behaviors they consider troubling and inappropriate.

Listening to Dementia breaks new ground both by analyzing the memoirs of people with dementia who became advocates and by discussing the administration of antipsychotic medications to manage behavior in the community, where the great majority of people with dementia live.

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Price: $30.00
Pages: 176
Publisher: NYU Press
Imprint: NYU Press
Publication Date: 29 September 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781479846962
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, HEALTH & FITNESS / Diseases / Alzheimer's & Dementia, MEDICAL / Caregiving
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"Emily K. Abel’s strategic use of memoir is a tour de force allowing those with dementia to reclaim the social narrative about them. When dementia is seen as a disability, not listening to those living with it is a human rights violation. A much-needed counter narrative to the narrow biomedical framing – the book disrupts misconceptions that a life with dementia is not worth living. In fact, a picture of meaningful life with dementia enters our cultural imagination. A must read for anyone newly diagnosed, those who love someone recently diagnosed, and all of us as we ourselves age."

"Abel provides a clear-eyed, unflinching analysis of topics that are too often shrouded in sentimental euphemism. This book should be required reading for anyone concerned with dementia and dementia care."