What Frailty Can Tell Us About Successful Ageing: Towards a Different Paradigm for Ageing Well

被引:0
|
作者
Pickard, Susan [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Liverpool, Ctr Ageing & Life Course, Dept Sociol Social Policy & Criminol, Liverpool, Merseyside, England
来源
GERONTOLOGIST | 2025年 / 65卷 / 01期
关键词
Existential phenomenology flourishing; Holistic approach; EXPERIENCES; HEALTH; OLD;
D O I
10.1093/geront/gnae057
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学]; R592 [老年病学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100203 ; 100602 ;
摘要
This paper considers the concept of successful aging by means of a dialogue with the concept of frailty. This dialogue reveals the limits and blind spots of both concepts as well as their apparent dichotomy and the importance of understanding both the objective and subjective experience of aging. In particular, the dialogue highlights that both frailty and successful aging are social constructs that derive their meaning from what society values (autonomy, youthful capacities). They cannot by themselves account for the fact that flourishing and frailty are often found together whilst conversely successful aging may not bring satisfaction. I argue that the arts and humanities supply us with conceptual and methodological tools with which to revisit what it is to age well offering a holistic approach that combines sensitivity both to older people's lived experience and to the underpinning material conditions and embodied realities. For this purpose, and building on previous scholarship in cultural gerontology, I suggest the unique value of concepts and frameworks associated by Simone de Beauvoir. When brought into alignment with the tenets of cultural and narrative gerontology, these concepts facilitate a rich understanding of the nuances and paradoxes of flourishing in deep old age which can also aid in restorying both old age and the life course more generally. I illustrate this through two examples: a feminist self-help guide to aging, which accepts both limitations and growth and a film that imagines the possibilities of authentic aging even despite a context of poverty, patriarchy, and Alzheimer's disease.
引用
收藏
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] What Can Different Motor Circuits Tell Us About Psychosis? An RDoC Perspective
    Mittal, Vijay A.
    Bernard, Jessica A.
    Northoff, Georg
    SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN, 2017, 43 (05) : 949 - 955
  • [42] On What It is to Fly Can Tell Us Something About What It is to Live
    Christophe Malaterre
    Origins of Life and Evolution of Biospheres, 2010, 40 : 169 - 177
  • [43] On What It is to Fly Can Tell Us Something About What It is to Live
    Malaterre, Christophe
    ORIGINS OF LIFE AND EVOLUTION OF BIOSPHERES, 2010, 40 (02): : 169 - 177
  • [44] What can "Lies" Tell Us about Life? Notes towards a Framework of Narrative Criminology
    Sandberg, Sveinung
    JOURNAL OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION, 2010, 21 (04) : 447 - 465
  • [45] What about us? Positive ageing is also a gay and lesbian issue!
    Birch, Heather
    AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL ON AGEING, 2004, 23 : A9 - A10
  • [46] Ageing, genes, environment and epigenetics: what twin studies tell us now, and in the future
    Steves, Claire Joanne
    Spector, Timothy D.
    Jackson, Stephen H. D.
    AGE AND AGEING, 2012, 41 (05) : 581 - 586
  • [47] WHAT RARE DISEASES CAN TELL US ABOUT OA
    Gallagher, J. A.
    OSTEOARTHRITIS AND CARTILAGE, 2020, 28 : S15 - S15
  • [48] What monkeys can tell us about metacognition and mindreading
    Kornell, Nate
    Schwartz, Bennett L.
    Son, Lisa K.
    BEHAVIORAL AND BRAIN SCIENCES, 2009, 32 (02) : 150 - +
  • [49] What can Spatial Collectives tell us about their Environment?
    Wood, Zena
    2014 IEEE SYMPOSIUM ON COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE AND DATA MINING (CIDM), 2014, : 329 - 336
  • [50] What can neuronal populations tell us about cognition?
    Arandia-Romero, Inigo
    Nogueira, Ramon
    Mochol, Gabriela
    Moreno-Bote, Ruben
    CURRENT OPINION IN NEUROBIOLOGY, 2017, 46 : 48 - 57