1st Edition

Negotiating Ageing Cultural Adaptation to the Prospect of a Long Life

By Simon Biggs Copyright 2018
    188 Pages
    by Routledge

    196 Pages
    by Routledge

    The world is growing older and this is a historically unprecedented phenomenon. Negotiating such change, personally, socially and for governments and international organisations requires an act of cultural adaptation. Two key questions arise: What is the purpose of a long life? and How do we adapt to societies where generations are of approximately the same size? A number of pre-existing narratives can be identified; however, it is argued that contemporary policies have produced a premature answer which may eclipse the potential arising from lifecourse change.

    In this book Simon Biggs discusses ways of interrogating these questions and the adaptations we make to them. Four major areas, all of which have been suggested as solutions to population ageing, are critically assessed, including work as an answer, the relationship between work, ageing and health, narratives of spirit, belief and wisdom, the body and the natural, anti-ageing medicine, critical approaches to dementia, plus family and intergenerational relations.

    This book is particiularly useful for those trying to make sense of population ageing and negotiate solutions. It describes a number of concepts that can be used to assess what we are told about a long life and how generations can adapt together.

    With the cultural landscape moving away from traditional interpretations of old age, the question of adult ageing is of growing interest to a number of groups. This book is essential reading for social and health-care workers, other helping professionals, policy makers, social scientists and all who encounter the prospect of a long life.

    Foreword

    Acknowledgements

    Chapter 1: The Promise of a Long Life

    Chapter 2: Interrogating Personal and Intergenerational Ageing

    Chapter 3: Work to the Rescue?

    Chapter 4 Is Work Good or Bad for Health?

    Chapter 5: Spirit, Belief and the In-between

    Chapter 6: Lifecourse, Gerotranscendence and Wisdom

    Chapter 7: The Ageing Body, the Social and the Natural

    Chapter 8: Anti Ageing

    Chapter 9: Dementia

    Chapter 10: Family and Generations

    Conclusions

    Index

    Biography

    Simon Biggs, PhD. Professor of Gerontology & Social Policy
    School of Social & Political Sciences, Melbourne University, Australia.