Critical Humanities and Ageing

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Advance Care Planning
Advance Care Planning Documents
age studies
Aging Studies
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Category=JKS
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Critical Gerontology
dementia ethics
disability intersectionality
eldercare philosophy
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Fuchs's Case
Good Life
Humanistic Gerontology
Ibsen's Late Plays
Ibsen’s Late Plays
interdisciplinary ageing humanities perspectives
Long Term Care
Long Term Dementia Care
Long Term Residential Care
Long Term Residential Care Settings
Malignant Social Psychology
Migrant Care Work
Nursing Home
Nursing Home Community
Nursing Home Life
Nursing Home Staff
Posthuman Care
Queer Aging
queer lifespan research
social gerontology
Successful Aging
Toni Calasanti
Trent University
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367630935
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 May 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Providing a critical humanities approach to ageing, this book addresses new directions in age studies: the meaning and workings of "ageism" in the twenty-first century, the vexed relationship between age and disability studies, the meanings and experiences of "queer" aging; the fascinating, yet often elided work of age activists; and, finally, the challenges posed by AI and, more generally, transhumanism in the context of caring for an ageing population.

Divided into four parts: Part I: What Does It Mean to Grow Old? Part II: Aging: Old Age and Disability Part III: Aging, Old Age, and Activism Part IV: Old Age and Humanistic Approaches to Care the volume provides an innovative, two-part structure that facilitates rather than merely encourages interdisciplinary collaboration across the humanities and social sciences. Each essay is thus followed by two short critical responses from disciplinary viewpoints that diverge from that of the essay’s author.

Drawing on work from across the humanities - philosophy, fine arts, religion, and literature, this book will be a useful supplemental text for courses on age studies, sociology and gerontology at both undergraduate and graduate levels.

Marlene Goldman is a Professor in the Department of English at the University of Toronto who specializes in Canadian literature, age studies, and medical humanities. In addition to her scholarly works, she has also written, directed, and produced a short film about dementia entitled "Piano Lessons" based on Alice Munro’s short story "In Sight of the Lake" from her collection Dear Life (2004). Her film Torching the Dusties, about ageing and intergenerational warfare from Margaret Atwood’s recent collection Stone Mattress (2014), premiered at the Fright Festival in London, U.K.

Kate de Medeiros is the O’Toole Family Professor of Gerontology in the Department of Sociology and Gerontology and a Scripps Research Fellow at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio. Dr. de Medeiros’s research is broadly focused on understanding the experience of later life using narratives and other qualitative and mix-methods approaches. Research topics include storying later life, the meaning of home, suffering in old age, generativity, moral development in later life, and friendships and social connectivity among people living with dementia.

Thomas R. Cole is the McGovern Chair and Director of the McGovern Center for Humanities and Ethics at University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston. His work has been featured in The New York Times, NPR, and PBS. Cole has served as an advisor to the President’s Council on Bioethics and the United Nations NGO Committee on Ageing. His book The Journey of Life: A Cultural History of Aging in America was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.