Article ID: CBB956259833

Bending the Clock: New Perspectives on Nineteenth-Century Ageing: A Roundtable Conversation (2021)

unapi

Over the past decade, several academic studies have taken nineteenth-century ageing as their topic, including Devoney Looser’s Women Writers and Old Age in Great Britain (2008), Karen Chase’s The Victorians and Old Age (2009), Kay Heath’s Aging by the Book (2009), and Alice Crossley’s special issue of Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies (2017). Following the publication of two significant new monographs — Andrea Charise’s The Aesthetics of Senescence (2020) and Jacob Jewusiak’s Aging, Duration, and the English Novel (2019) — the time is ripe for a synthesis of this dynamic cluster of scholarship, with special attention to where nineteenth-century perspectives on ageing is going, and ought to go, from here. Recorded in January 2020, this roundtable is a curated compilation of conversations with key scholars in the field: Devoney Looser (Arizona State University), David McAllister (Birkbeck, University of London), Ruth M. McAdams (Skidmore College), Jake Jewusiak (Newcastle University), and Travis Chi Wing Lau (Kenyon College). Edited by Andrea Charise, this roundtable assembles new perspectives on the present and future of nineteenth-century studies of age(ing), including: What’s next for age studies’ approaches to reading and teaching nineteenth-century texts? How might a better understanding of ‘old’ models inform our current day concerns with ageing populations and intergenerational discord? Can age studies research help make a case for the enduring role of the arts and humanities in a STEM-dominated culture? And how might attending to the old, ageing, and obsolete help address newly emergent global crises, including the rise of populism and climate change? Accessible in both audio format and textual transcription, this roundtable interview offers a timely resource for researchers, students, and a broader public interested in the literary present and futures of ageing and older age.

...More
Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB956259833/

Similar Citations

Thesis Bezio, Kelly L.; (2013)
Communicable Disease in the American Literary Imagination (/isis/citation/CBB001567498/)

Article Harris, Bernard; Gorsky, Martin; Guntupalli, Aravinda; Hinde, Andrew; (2011)
Ageing, Sickness and Health in England and Wales during the Mortality Transition (/isis/citation/CBB001210679/)

Article Sara Zadrozny; (2021)
Of Cosmetic Value Only: Make-Up and Terrible Old Ladies in Victorian Literature (/isis/citation/CBB388592897/)

Book Hannah C. Tweed; Diane G. Scott; (2018)
Medical Paratexts from Medieval to Modern: Dissecting the Page (/isis/citation/CBB835785112/)

Article Christian Lewis; (2020)
“A Malady of Interpretation”: Performances of Hypochondria in Jane Austen (/isis/citation/CBB745084251/)

Article Dinges, Martin; (2013)
Gender-Specific Health Advice in German Journals for Homeopathic Patients (1880--2000) (/isis/citation/CBB001320172/)

Book Sari Altschuler; (2018)
The Medical Imagination: Literature and Health in the Early United States (/isis/citation/CBB584547173/)

Thesis Jaime Konerman-Sease; (2022)
From Cure to Care: a Practical Theology of Health According to Jane Austen (/isis/citation/CBB857758405/)

Book Will Tattersdill; (2016)
Science, Fiction, and the Fin-de-Siècle Periodical Press (/isis/citation/CBB727795187/)

Book Michael J. Crowe; (2018)
The Gestalt Shift in Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes Stories (/isis/citation/CBB650011309/)

Book Ian Duncan; (2019)
Human Forms: The Novel in the Age of Evolution (/isis/citation/CBB663333559/)

Article Régis Olry; Duane E. Haines; (2018)
Tabes Dorsalis: Not, at All, “Elementary my dear Watson!” (/isis/citation/CBB588205955/)

Book Brycchan Carey; Sayre Greenfield; Anne Milne; (2020)
Birds in Eighteenth-Century Literature: Reason, Emotion, and Ornithology, 1700–1840 (/isis/citation/CBB640839629/)

Thesis Mo Li; (2017)
Science and Edgar Allan Poe's Pathway to Cosmic Truth (/isis/citation/CBB849763322/)

Thesis Rae X. Yan; (2018)
"This Seemingly So Solid Body": Philosophical Anatomy and Victorian Fiction (/isis/citation/CBB686565075/)

Thesis Wietske Smeele; (2018)
The Victorian Posthuman: Monstrous Bodies in Literature and Science (/isis/citation/CBB118579237/)

Thesis Matthew Robert Sherrill; (2016)
Forms of Life: Evolution and Poetic Form in the British Long Nineteenth Century (/isis/citation/CBB649997265/)

Thesis Ella Tobin Mershon; (2016)
Passing Forms: Decay and the Making of Victorian Culture (/isis/citation/CBB587948355/)

Authors & Contributors
Duncan, Ian
Altschuler, Sari B.
Bezio, Kelly L.
Crowe, Michael J.
Dinges, Martin
Gorsky, Martin
Journals
19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Circumscribere: International Journal for the History of Science
Journal of the History of the Neurosciences
Nineteenth-Century Studies
Social History of Medicine
Publishers
Palgrave Macmillan
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
University of Minnesota
University of Toronto
Vanderbilt University
University of California, Berkeley
Concepts
Science and literature
Literary analysis
Medicine and literature
Health
Medicine
Disease and diseases
People
Austen, Jane
Donne, John
Doyle, Arthur Conan
Kuhn, Thomas S.
Poe, Edgar Allan
Shakespeare, William
Time Periods
19th century
18th century
20th century
Places
Great Britain
United States
Caribbean
Europe
Germany
North America
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment