Memory Loss and Scenic Experience: An Arts Based Investigation

In our research, two groups of people living with memory loss due to mid-stage dementia were invited to view a film installation, centred on the experience of a woman with a brain lesion and dense amnesia. The groups, recruited from day-care and support settings, were living at home. One included in...

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Main Authors: Jill Bennett, Lynn Froggett, Gail Kenning, Julian Manley, Lizzie Muller
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: FQS 2019-01-01
Series:Forum: Qualitative Social Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/3126
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author Jill Bennett
Lynn Froggett
Gail Kenning
Julian Manley
Lizzie Muller
author_facet Jill Bennett
Lynn Froggett
Gail Kenning
Julian Manley
Lizzie Muller
author_sort Jill Bennett
collection DOAJ
description In our research, two groups of people living with memory loss due to mid-stage dementia were invited to view a film installation, centred on the experience of a woman with a brain lesion and dense amnesia. The groups, recruited from day-care and support settings, were living at home. One included informal care-givers. After the film, each participated in a visual matrix: A group-based method of eliciting image-led and affective associations in response to aesthetic stimuli to support shared and distributed memory. We hypothesised that the associative process of the visual matrix would support meaningful engagement for participants with dementia. We discuss the participation and self-reflection facilitated through the method in terms of social scaffolding, attending to differences between the groups, presence of care-givers and visual matrix setting. We consider the conditions in which scenic experience, replete with embodied memory traces is expressed in a visual matrix by people with impaired recall, enabling them to engage with a complex artwork. This provides insight into how the embodied, subjective experience of people living with memory loss can be communicated. Implications for enrichment programmes, social activities and communication in group care settings are considered.
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spelling doaj.art-6a394ddbd4444fcf83d30561a22487a62022-12-22T00:27:07ZdeuFQSForum: Qualitative Social Research1438-56272019-01-0120110.17169/fqs-20.1.31261976Memory Loss and Scenic Experience: An Arts Based InvestigationJill Bennett0Lynn Froggett1Gail Kenning2Julian Manley3Lizzie Muller4University of New South WalesUniversity of Central LancashireUniversity of TechnologyUniversity of Central LancashireUniversity of New South WalesIn our research, two groups of people living with memory loss due to mid-stage dementia were invited to view a film installation, centred on the experience of a woman with a brain lesion and dense amnesia. The groups, recruited from day-care and support settings, were living at home. One included informal care-givers. After the film, each participated in a visual matrix: A group-based method of eliciting image-led and affective associations in response to aesthetic stimuli to support shared and distributed memory. We hypothesised that the associative process of the visual matrix would support meaningful engagement for participants with dementia. We discuss the participation and self-reflection facilitated through the method in terms of social scaffolding, attending to differences between the groups, presence of care-givers and visual matrix setting. We consider the conditions in which scenic experience, replete with embodied memory traces is expressed in a visual matrix by people with impaired recall, enabling them to engage with a complex artwork. This provides insight into how the embodied, subjective experience of people living with memory loss can be communicated. Implications for enrichment programmes, social activities and communication in group care settings are considered.http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/3126artaffectsocial scaffoldingmemory lossdementiareverievisual matrixscenic experience
spellingShingle Jill Bennett
Lynn Froggett
Gail Kenning
Julian Manley
Lizzie Muller
Memory Loss and Scenic Experience: An Arts Based Investigation
Forum: Qualitative Social Research
art
affect
social scaffolding
memory loss
dementia
reverie
visual matrix
scenic experience
title Memory Loss and Scenic Experience: An Arts Based Investigation
title_full Memory Loss and Scenic Experience: An Arts Based Investigation
title_fullStr Memory Loss and Scenic Experience: An Arts Based Investigation
title_full_unstemmed Memory Loss and Scenic Experience: An Arts Based Investigation
title_short Memory Loss and Scenic Experience: An Arts Based Investigation
title_sort memory loss and scenic experience an arts based investigation
topic art
affect
social scaffolding
memory loss
dementia
reverie
visual matrix
scenic experience
url http://www.qualitative-research.net/index.php/fqs/article/view/3126
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AT gailkenning memorylossandscenicexperienceanartsbasedinvestigation
AT julianmanley memorylossandscenicexperienceanartsbasedinvestigation
AT lizziemuller memorylossandscenicexperienceanartsbasedinvestigation