Sally Clark has been an influential figure in Canadian theatre and scholarship since the 1980s. While some critics have traced feminist impulses in her work, none have yet considered how some of her plays unsettle dominant paradigms of aging and old age. This article analyses Clark’s dramaturgy in two plays that offer compelling portraits of women aging into and experiencing old age: Moo and Ten Ways to Abuse an Old Woman. While at times Clark reinscribes ageist narratives, she also offers resistant and rebellious alterna- tives to dominant age ideology, particularly in her disruption of the decline narrative. Clark’s use of achronicity, disruption of rising conflict, intratextual polyvocality, ambiguous endings, and humor results in constr...
The paper examines the literary portrayals of the elderly residents at the Senior Living Facility in...
In traditional gerontological terms, adaptation is usually understood as the production of physical ...
Ageing is trouble for women: our longevity and a lifetime of gendered pay inequalities can leave us ...
This dissertation is a critical exploration of aging and old age in contemporary Canadian theatre. I...
Following the so-called revolution of longevity, which was initiated after the Second World War, and...
Cultural gerontology has developed critical work around cultural representations of age and aging an...
In our increasingly aged societies, old age continues to be equated with decline (Gullette 2004) and...
British contemporary novelists Penelope Lively and Angela Carter are well known for their contributi...
This thesis combines traditional and practice-based methods to research the representation of age an...
The subject of the paper is twofold: to discuss the age awareness as a meaningful element in plays o...
Joan Rivers’ performance in the public sphere revolved around the visibility and cultural inscriptio...
This Master of Creative Writing research project consists of a collection of short stories and an a...
In an interdisciplinary study, I argue that narrative fiction centred around old women, through its ...
Despite the exponential aging of worldwide population, and despite women still living longer than me...
Discourses on old age and ageing are framed in narrow and binary ways, either as a decline narrative...
The paper examines the literary portrayals of the elderly residents at the Senior Living Facility in...
In traditional gerontological terms, adaptation is usually understood as the production of physical ...
Ageing is trouble for women: our longevity and a lifetime of gendered pay inequalities can leave us ...
This dissertation is a critical exploration of aging and old age in contemporary Canadian theatre. I...
Following the so-called revolution of longevity, which was initiated after the Second World War, and...
Cultural gerontology has developed critical work around cultural representations of age and aging an...
In our increasingly aged societies, old age continues to be equated with decline (Gullette 2004) and...
British contemporary novelists Penelope Lively and Angela Carter are well known for their contributi...
This thesis combines traditional and practice-based methods to research the representation of age an...
The subject of the paper is twofold: to discuss the age awareness as a meaningful element in plays o...
Joan Rivers’ performance in the public sphere revolved around the visibility and cultural inscriptio...
This Master of Creative Writing research project consists of a collection of short stories and an a...
In an interdisciplinary study, I argue that narrative fiction centred around old women, through its ...
Despite the exponential aging of worldwide population, and despite women still living longer than me...
Discourses on old age and ageing are framed in narrow and binary ways, either as a decline narrative...
The paper examines the literary portrayals of the elderly residents at the Senior Living Facility in...
In traditional gerontological terms, adaptation is usually understood as the production of physical ...
Ageing is trouble for women: our longevity and a lifetime of gendered pay inequalities can leave us ...