Please join us for the sixth 
seminar series of Inventions of the 
Text 
2012/13
Life-writing at the limits: dementia in
contemporary autobiographies and life-
writing projects
***
Wednesday, 13th
February 2013
5:30 – 7:00 
pm
Department of 
English Studies, Hallgarth House Seminar Room
***
Rebecca Bitenc, 
Durham University
Dementia, due to 
world-wide increasing incidence rates, has come to the fore of public awareness. 
Its alleged loss of self raises a number of ethical and thus social and 
political issues. Etymologically denoting a person who is “out of mind”, 
dementia today designates a specific syndrome and, together with other mental 
disorders, has undergone a process of medicalization, which influences the way 
we understand it. At the same time, a growing number of cultural representations 
have flooded the literary market – from novels, dramas and films to 
autobiographies by care-givers and people with dementia. 
This paper will look 
at a number of autobiographies by people with early-onset Alzheimer’s as well as 
the published output of two arts projects by writers in residence in care homes, 
to analyse how these texts and their authors and co-authors negotiate and 
challenge the issue of selfhood and its loss in dementia.
About the 
speaker:
Rebecca Bitenc is currently reading for a PhD in 
English Literature at Durham University. Her thesis on "Losing One's Self: 
Dementia in Autobiography, Biography and Fiction" (working title) explores how, 
in contemporary literature, the alleged loss of self in dementia is expressed 
across different genres - with particular focus on the ethics of literary form. 
Her PhD project is funded by the AHRC and supervised by Professor Patricia Waugh 
and Professor Corinne Saunders. She completed her M.A. at the 
Albert-Ludwigs-Universitat Freiburg, Germany in English, French and Psychology 
in January 2011. 
 
 
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