Looking “out of place”: analysing the spatial and symbolic meanings of dementia care settings through dress

Author:

Buse Christina,Twigg Julia

Abstract

The article explores how clothing exposes – and troubles – the ambiguous location of care homes on the boundaries of public/private, home/institutional space. It deploys a material analysis of the symbolic uses and meanings of dress, extending the remit of the new cultural gerontology to encompass the “fourth age,” and the lives of older people with dementia. The article draws on an ESRC-funded study “Dementia and Dress,” conducted in the United Kingdom (UK), which explored everyday experiences of clothing for people with dementia, carers and careworkers, using ethnographic and qualitative methods. Careworkers and managers were keen to emphasise the “homely” nature of care homes, yet this was sometimes at odds with the desire to maintain presentable and orderly bodies, and with institutional routines of bodywork. Residents’ use of clothing could disrupt boundaries of public/private space, materialising a sense of not being “at home,” and a desire to return there.

Publisher

Linkoping University Electronic Press

Subject

Life-span and Life-course Studies,Cultural Studies,Health (social science),Gender Studies

Reference80 articles.

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Alzheimer’s Society. (2014). Dementia UK (Second Edition): Overview. London: Alzheimer’s Society.

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Allan, G. & Crow, G. (1989). Introduction. In G. Allan & G. Crow (eds.), Home and Family: Creating the Domestic Space (pp. 1–13). London: Macmillan.

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Appleford, K. (2013). Fashion and class evaluation. In S. Black, A. Haye, J. Entwistle, R. Root, H. Thomas & A. Rocamora (eds.), The Handbook of Fashion Studies (pp. 102–120). London: Bloomsbury.

5.

Appleford, K. (2015). Being seen in your pyjamas: The relationship between fashion, class, gender & space. Gender, Place and Culture. doi: 10.1080/0966369X.2015.1013439.

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