This thesis analyses thirteen key literary texts taken from the last century of Canadian English-language publishing to assess how each text reveals, reinforces, and /or resists narratives of natural-aging, decline, progress and positive-aging. When considered together, these texts illustrate overall patterns in the evolution of age-related beliefs and behaviours. Stories have a potential emotional impact that scholarly readings do not, and thus the reading and study of these texts can serve to promote conscious intellectual consideration of the issues surrounding age and aging. My analysis focuses on how our Canadian literature envisages aging into old age, primarily addressing stories set in late-life-care facilities and comprising what ...
Prevailing paradigms in gerontology tend to eclipse the creative side of aging, implicitly perceivin...
For many people, aging is perceived and experienced in implicitly tragic terms: as a narrative of de...
This article examines Roald Dahl's adult short story ‘The Landlady’ through the lens of age studies ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis deals with the presentation of old age in Englis...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis deals with the presentation of old age in Englis...
This paper addresses cultural constructions of old age in two contemporary Canadian care home narrat...
In an interdisciplinary study, I argue that narrative fiction centred around old women, through its ...
This dissertation traces a literary genealogy of old age and argues that British literature offers b...
This dissertation traces a literary genealogy of old age and argues that British literature offers b...
The shared interest in the cultural meanings of age and in life as story has facilitated fruitful ex...
The shared interest in the cultural meanings of age and in life as story has facilitated fruitful ex...
The shared interest in the cultural meanings of age and in life as story has facilitated fruitful ex...
The shared interest in the cultural meanings of age and in life as story has facilitated fruitful ex...
This dissertation is a critical exploration of aging and old age in contemporary Canadian theatre. I...
This dissertation is a critical exploration of aging and old age in contemporary Canadian theatre. I...
Prevailing paradigms in gerontology tend to eclipse the creative side of aging, implicitly perceivin...
For many people, aging is perceived and experienced in implicitly tragic terms: as a narrative of de...
This article examines Roald Dahl's adult short story ‘The Landlady’ through the lens of age studies ...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis deals with the presentation of old age in Englis...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis deals with the presentation of old age in Englis...
This paper addresses cultural constructions of old age in two contemporary Canadian care home narrat...
In an interdisciplinary study, I argue that narrative fiction centred around old women, through its ...
This dissertation traces a literary genealogy of old age and argues that British literature offers b...
This dissertation traces a literary genealogy of old age and argues that British literature offers b...
The shared interest in the cultural meanings of age and in life as story has facilitated fruitful ex...
The shared interest in the cultural meanings of age and in life as story has facilitated fruitful ex...
The shared interest in the cultural meanings of age and in life as story has facilitated fruitful ex...
The shared interest in the cultural meanings of age and in life as story has facilitated fruitful ex...
This dissertation is a critical exploration of aging and old age in contemporary Canadian theatre. I...
This dissertation is a critical exploration of aging and old age in contemporary Canadian theatre. I...
Prevailing paradigms in gerontology tend to eclipse the creative side of aging, implicitly perceivin...
For many people, aging is perceived and experienced in implicitly tragic terms: as a narrative of de...
This article examines Roald Dahl's adult short story ‘The Landlady’ through the lens of age studies ...