Reprint

Ageing as a Unique Experience: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Ageing and Later Life from Social and Humanities Perspectives

Edited by
February 2023
224 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-6618-4 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-6619-1 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Ageing as a Unique Experience: Interdisciplinary Approaches to Ageing and Later Life from Social and Humanities Perspectives that was published in

Business & Economics
Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

Ageing is a diverse and multifaceted experience that is unique to each person. The process of ageing is lived differently according to each individual’s socio-cultural, historical, religious, and political context, among other factors. However, the stereotype of homogeneity is still one of the strongest aspects related to later life. This Special Issue covers manuscripts of original research that critically explore the experience of old age and the process of growing older from the social sciences and humanities perspectives. It also explores the topics pertaining to social gerontology, cultural and literary gerontology, environmental gerontology, gerotechnological studies, social anthropology, gender studies, body politics, sexuality, active and healthy ageing, space and place, age-friendly politics and other themes. The published articles collect arguments that show the variables and uniqueness of later life, and expand on the current theoretical frameworks in the field of age studies and beyond. The overall aim of this Special Issue was to broaden the gerontological scholarship and develop critical thought of old age and the life course beyond the merely biological processes of growing older and their sociocultural constructs. This Special Issue can be of interest to scholars, practitioners, stakeholders, care workers and individuals who are concerned with the dynamics of ageing as well as current and future dialogues on the unique experiences of ageing.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
ageing; older adults; intimacy; creativity; strict morality; sexuality; theories of retirement; rhythmanalysis; management of time; interdisciplinary gerontology; busy ethic; societal rhythms; ageing; home; identity; Ireland; place attachment; rural; Sweden; women; ageing; inclusivity; Zimbabwe; urban environments; discourse analysis; urban policy; Africa; ageism; COVID-19; fourth age; nursing homes; third age; cultural and literary gerontology; aging and society; agism; popular culture and comics; DC superheroes; aging in place; older adults; dementia; cognitive changes; home; ageing; design practice; user involvement; participatory design; socio-gerontechnology; active ageing; age-friendly; age panic; metaphor; neoliberal imagination; older adults’ media practices; older adults’ media biographies; long-term care; social isolation in later life; social agency; person-centered care; information and communication technology (ICT); life course perspective; communicative ecology mapping; focused ethnography; activism; ageism; Iaioflautas; identity; intergenerational solidarity; politicization; older adults; social movements; culture; interdependence; life course perspective; older immigrants; religious minority; social relationships; COVID-19; older people; public participation; European welfare states; gerontological responses; pandemic management; ageing; materiality; corporeality; humanoid robot Pepper; human–robot interactions; gender