Abstract

ABSTRACT Nursing home care across world have predominantly undergone a progressive marketisation in recent decades, characterised by the dominance of neoliberal values such as productivity, profit motive among others. The looming economic costs and the social-political preferences for neoliberal values have placed the need to provide care for increasing number of older people with complex care needs low on government agendas. As the result, the experiential realities of the stakeholders: care providers, care receivers and their families are often overlooked and undervalued. Susan MacLeod’s Dying for Attention: A Graphic Memoir of Nursing Home Care (2021), besides demonstrating underrepresented and unarticulated of realities of Canadian nursing home care and critiquing the system in place, emphasises the need to reconcile and embrace the long-term care system. Taking cues from the graphic memoir, this article examines how the network of relationships in nursing homes impacts each other and the care provided to the residents. In so doing, the essay brings to light the necessities for coordinated functioning of the system. Utilizing the affordances of comics, the article also examines how evaluating care work based on capitalist standards coerces the care workers to compromise the quality of care provided to the residents.

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