Narrativizing Memory’s End: A Critical Overview of Contemporary Indian English Dementia Narratives

Authors

Keywords:

dementia, narration, India, fiction, memoir

Abstract

This paper provides an overview of contemporary Indian English narratives of dementia, exploring the complex interplay between narrative strategies and the representation of dementia subjectivity, reflecting wider socio-cultural attitudes toward the illness. The study examines Indian fiction and non-fiction published in English since the 21st century in the wake of a firm disability consciousness globally. By analysing six concurrent caregiver memoirs and fictional texts produced in the Indian literary scene, namely, In the Line of Alzheimer’s: The Mission Continues (2009) by S. P. Bhattacharjya, Krishna: Living with Alzheimer’s (2015) by Ranabir Samaddar, A World Within (2014) by Minakshi Chaudhry, Our Nana was a Nutcase (2015) by Ranjit Lal, Girl in White Cotton (2020) by Avni Doshi, and Mrs. C Remembers (2017) by Himanjali Sankar, the research underscores the challenges in representing the lived experiences of dementia vis-à-vis issues of identity, memory, and aging. The paper explores the ethical dilemmas in narrating dementia – balancing agency, limitations of empathy, and politics of representation, alongside the convergence of biomedical and socio-cultural discourses that influence how dementia is portrayed, understood and treated. The study concludes with insights into contemporary dementia narratives and suggests future interdisciplinary research directions within the Indian context.

Author Biographies

  • Mousana Nightingale Chowdhury , Research Scholar, Cotton University

    Mousana Nightingale Chowdhury is a third-year doctoral candidate (English) at Cotton University, India. She is pursuing her PhD in dementia narratives at the intersection of Health Humanities and Disability Studies. Other areas of her research interest include Victorian Literature, Literatures of the Anthropocene and Japanese Anime and Manga. Her works have appeared in The Polyphony: Conversations across the medical humanities and Age, Culture and Humanities journal. Her latest publication is a co-authored chapter in Disability and Peripherality (2025) published by Springer Nature.

  • Payal Jain , Assistant Professor, Cotton University

    Dr. Payal Jain teaches in the Department of English, Cotton University. Her PhD thesis was on the critique of body and sexuality in contemporary Indian English Women’s Fiction. Her areas of interest and research are women’s writing, female body and sexuality, Indian English literature, fiction studies, narrative theory, pedagogy, ageing, and medical humanities.

References

Bhattacharjya, S P. In the Line of Alzheimer’s: The Mission Continues. Nilanjana Maulik, ARDSI Kolkata, 2009.

Bitenc, Rebecca Anna. Dementia Narratives in Contemporary Literature, Life Writing, and Film, Durham theses, Durham University, 2017, http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/12157/.

Brockmeier, Jens, and Lars-Christer Hydén, editors. Health, Illness and Culture: Broken Narratives. Routledge, 2011.

Brody, Howard. Stories of Sickness. Oxford UP, 2003.

Carlson, Licia. The Faces of Intellectual Disability: Philosophical Reflections. Indiana UP, 2010.

Carson, Jan. Introduction. A Little Unsteadily into Light. Edited by Jan Carson and Jane Lugea. New Island Books, 2022, pp. 8-19.

Chaudhry, Minakshi. A World Within. Hay House Publishers, 2014.

Christ, Susanne Katharina. Fictions of Dementia: Narrative Modes of Presenting Dementia in Anglophone Novels. De Gruyter, 2022.

Cohen, Lawrence. No Aging in India: Alzheimer’s, the Bad Family and Other Modern Things. U of California P, 1998.

Conway, Kathlyn. Beyond Words: Illness and the Limits of Expression. U of New Mexico P, 2007.

Couser, G. Thomas. Signifying Bodies: Disability in Contemporary Life-Writing. U of Michigan P, 2009.

Doshi, Avni. Girl in White Cotton. Harper Collins Publishers, 2020.

Falcus, Sarah, and Katsura Sako. Contemporary Narratives of Dementia: Ethics, Ageing, Politics. Routledge, 2019.

Frow, John. Genre. Routledge, 2006.

Goodey, C. F. “On Certainty, Reflexivity, and the Ethics of Genetic Research into Intellectual Disability.” Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, vol. 47, no. 7, 2003, pp. 548–554.

Hartung, Heike. Ageing, Gender, and Illness in Anglophone Literature: Narrating Age in the Bildungsroman. Routledge, 2016.

Kruger, Naomi. “Dementia Fiction: Giving Voice to an Experience beyond Language.”Voices of Illness: Negotiating Meaning and Identity. Edited by Peter Bray, Brill Rodopi, 2019, pp. 230-247.

Lal, Ranjit. Our Nana Was a Nutcase. Rupa Publications India Pvt. Ltd, 2015.

Latham, Kate. “Stories We Tell about Dementia.” Diss. U of Gloucestershire, May 2016.

Linde, Charlotte. “Memory in Narrative.” The International Encyclopedia of Language and Social Interaction. Edited by Karen Tracy, John Wiley &Sons, Inc, 2015.

Nayar, Pramod K. Postcolonialism: A Guide for the Perplexed. Continuum International Publishing Group, 2010.

---.“Dementia in recent Indian fiction in English”. Dementia and Literature: Interdisciplinary Perspectives. Edited by Tess Maginess, Routledge, 2018, pp. 148-159.

---. Alzheimer’s Disease Memoirs: Poetics of the Forgetting Self. Springer, 2021.

Quinn, Jocey and Claudia Blandon. Lifelong Learning and Dementia: A Posthumanist Perspective. Palgrave Pivot Cham, 2020.

Samaddar, Ranabir. Krishna: Living with Alzheimer’s. Women Unlimited, 2015.

Sankar, Himajali. Mrs C Remembers. Pan Macmillan, 2017.

Sklar, Howard. “Anything but a Simpleton: The Ethics of Representing Intellectual Disability in Tarjei Vesaas’s TheBirds.” Narrative Ethics. Edited by Jakob Lothe and Jeremy Hawthorn, Rodopi B. V., 2013, pp. 167-179.

Smith, Sidonie and Julia Watson. Reading Autobiography: A Guide for Interpreting Life Narratives. U of Minnesota P, 2001.

Vanderveren, Elien, Patricia Bijttebier and Dirk Hermans. “The Importance of Memory Specificity and Memory Coherence for the Self: Linking Two Characteristics of Autobiographical Memory.” Frontiers in Psychology, vol. 8, 2017, pp. 1-13.

Young, Kay and Jeffrey L. Saver. “The Neurology of Narrative.” SubStance, vol. 30, no.1–2, pp. 72–84.

Zimmermann, Martina. Introduction. The Diseased Brain and the Failing Mind: Dementia in Science, Medicine and Literature of the Long Twentieth Century. Bloomsbury Academic, 2020, pp. 1–20.

Published

29-12-2025