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Anticipating an unwanted future: euthanasia and dementia in the Netherlands
Author(s) -
Lemos Dekker Natashe
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the royal anthropological institute
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.62
H-Index - 62
eISSN - 1467-9655
pISSN - 1359-0987
DOI - 10.1111/1467-9655.13429
Subject(s) - anticipation (artificial intelligence) , dementia , ethnography , deferral , psychology , work (physics) , sociology , history , medicine , business , computer science , anthropology , disease , engineering , mechanical engineering , accounting , pathology , artificial intelligence
This ethnographic exploration of anticipation draws on fieldwork among people with dementia and their families in the Netherlands. I examine how requests for euthanasia by people with dementia offer insight into the work of anticipation, revealing it to be a temporal orientation through which the future is made tangible. Imagining a future with dementia may prompt some people to request euthanasia, but timing such measures is extremely difficult and often results in deferral. Contributing to an emerging anthropology of time, I argue that anticipation is a process of establishing, collapsing, and renegotiating the temporal distance between present and future, bringing the future into the present while also, and simultaneously, keeping the future at bay as a continuous ‘not yet’.

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