To be Forever Young? Towards Reframing Corporeal Subjectivity in Maturity

In this paper I examine the relationship between the body in midlife and subjectivity in contemporary western cultures, drawing on both social constructionist and psychoanalytic perspectives. Referring to recent theoretical accounts, I take the position that how we are aged by culture begins in mid...

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Main Author: Liz Schwaiger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Linköping University Electronic Press 2006-06-01
Series:International Journal of Ageing and Later Life
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.ep.liu.se/IJAL/article/view/1104
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spelling doaj-8bfd473f5f604cd686914586e76d0f682020-11-25T02:17:31ZengLinköping University Electronic PressInternational Journal of Ageing and Later Life1652-86702006-06-011110.3384/ijal.1652-8670.061111To be Forever Young? Towards Reframing Corporeal Subjectivity in MaturityLiz Schwaiger0 Centre for Social and Community Research, Murdoch University, Western Australia In this paper I examine the relationship between the body in midlife and subjectivity in contemporary western cultures, drawing on both social constructionist and psychoanalytic perspectives. Referring to recent theoretical accounts, I take the position that how we are aged by culture begins in midlife, and that this period is therefore critical in understanding how the body-subject in western consumer cultures is aged and gendered through culturally normative discourses and practices. I also address the gendering of ageing bodies, and argue that, like the feminine, ageing has been marked by ambiguity and lack. This ambiguity has presented a problem for dualistic age theories, in that it has been difficult to theorize the ageing body productively since the binary language used to theorize it already devalues old age. I contend that our tacit understanding of both male and female ageing bodies is as discursively constituted as ’feminine’, based on cultural perceptions of loss of bodily control and the ambiguity of ageing bodies that become increasingly recalcitrant in the ’correct’ performance of cultural age and gender norms. Finally, I inquire whether alternative, non-dualistic perspectives might be developed that redress this problem, and disrupt the alignment of ageing with negative associations such as lack and loss, perspectives that, rather than associating gendered ageing with decline, loss or lack, associate it with the goal of living an abundant life into deep old age. https://journal.ep.liu.se/IJAL/article/view/1104gendered ageingcultural normsbody-subjectmidlifemature subjectivity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Liz Schwaiger
spellingShingle Liz Schwaiger
To be Forever Young? Towards Reframing Corporeal Subjectivity in Maturity
International Journal of Ageing and Later Life
gendered ageing
cultural norms
body-subject
midlife
mature subjectivity
author_facet Liz Schwaiger
author_sort Liz Schwaiger
title To be Forever Young? Towards Reframing Corporeal Subjectivity in Maturity
title_short To be Forever Young? Towards Reframing Corporeal Subjectivity in Maturity
title_full To be Forever Young? Towards Reframing Corporeal Subjectivity in Maturity
title_fullStr To be Forever Young? Towards Reframing Corporeal Subjectivity in Maturity
title_full_unstemmed To be Forever Young? Towards Reframing Corporeal Subjectivity in Maturity
title_sort to be forever young? towards reframing corporeal subjectivity in maturity
publisher Linköping University Electronic Press
series International Journal of Ageing and Later Life
issn 1652-8670
publishDate 2006-06-01
description In this paper I examine the relationship between the body in midlife and subjectivity in contemporary western cultures, drawing on both social constructionist and psychoanalytic perspectives. Referring to recent theoretical accounts, I take the position that how we are aged by culture begins in midlife, and that this period is therefore critical in understanding how the body-subject in western consumer cultures is aged and gendered through culturally normative discourses and practices. I also address the gendering of ageing bodies, and argue that, like the feminine, ageing has been marked by ambiguity and lack. This ambiguity has presented a problem for dualistic age theories, in that it has been difficult to theorize the ageing body productively since the binary language used to theorize it already devalues old age. I contend that our tacit understanding of both male and female ageing bodies is as discursively constituted as ’feminine’, based on cultural perceptions of loss of bodily control and the ambiguity of ageing bodies that become increasingly recalcitrant in the ’correct’ performance of cultural age and gender norms. Finally, I inquire whether alternative, non-dualistic perspectives might be developed that redress this problem, and disrupt the alignment of ageing with negative associations such as lack and loss, perspectives that, rather than associating gendered ageing with decline, loss or lack, associate it with the goal of living an abundant life into deep old age.
topic gendered ageing
cultural norms
body-subject
midlife
mature subjectivity
url https://journal.ep.liu.se/IJAL/article/view/1104
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