“…Since the 1990s, much social dementia research has been informed by symbolic interactionism (Fletcher, 2018), focusing on dementia as an interacted experience inhabiting interpersonal relationships (Bartlett & O'Conner, 2010). It encompasses work on personhood and person-centredness (Kitwood, 1997), selfhood (Sabat, 2001), embodiment (Kontos, 2004), dress (Twigg, 2010), identity (Beard, 2016), social experience (Brossard, 2019), moral careers and deviance (Fletcher, 2019b(Fletcher, , 2019c(Fletcher, , 2020c. Scholars have drawn on interactionism's resonance with interpersonal meaning-making processes that shape dementia.…”