This paper is based on a series of ?anti-narrative? interviews with self-identified LGBT people designed to explore the ways in which lived experiences of age, gender and sexuality are negotiated and narrated within organizations in later life. It draws on Judith Butler?s performative ontology of gender, particularly her account of the ways in which the desire for recognition is shaped by heteronormativity, considering its implications for how we study ageing and organizations. In doing so, the paper develops a critique of the impact of heteronormative life course expectations on the negotiation of viable subjectivity within organizational settings. Focusing on the ways in which 'chrononormativity?shapes the lived experiences of ageing with...
A growing body of literature is challenging understanding of sexuality in later life. The dominance ...
Ageism in the manager–employee relationship is one of the main obstacles towards an age-inclusive wo...
This paper examines the potential of queer ideas for social gerontology and aged care practice. It o...
This paper is based on a series of ‘anti-narrative’ interviews designed to explore the ways in which...
While growing up is recognized as an important transitional period that lays the foundations for fut...
This article explores the methodological possibilities that Butler?s theory of performativity opens ...
This article explores the methodological possibilities that Butler’s theory of performativity opens ...
This chapter hopes to speaks to the theme of Intersections of Ageing, Gender, Sexualities as matched...
This article examines how older gay men practice masculinity in heteronormative organisational setti...
The intersection of age and ageing with organizations has not been extensively addressed in academic...
Age, as an embodied identity and as an organizing principle, has received scant attention in organiz...
The relationship between ageing and sexuality is contentious; older people are frequently represente...
Even in organization studies scholarship that treats gender as performative and fluid, a certain ‘cr...
Studying the aging process of gay men and lesbians is problematic because it assumes that sexual...
Age diversity research calls for new approaches in explaining the persistence of age inequalities, w...
A growing body of literature is challenging understanding of sexuality in later life. The dominance ...
Ageism in the manager–employee relationship is one of the main obstacles towards an age-inclusive wo...
This paper examines the potential of queer ideas for social gerontology and aged care practice. It o...
This paper is based on a series of ‘anti-narrative’ interviews designed to explore the ways in which...
While growing up is recognized as an important transitional period that lays the foundations for fut...
This article explores the methodological possibilities that Butler?s theory of performativity opens ...
This article explores the methodological possibilities that Butler’s theory of performativity opens ...
This chapter hopes to speaks to the theme of Intersections of Ageing, Gender, Sexualities as matched...
This article examines how older gay men practice masculinity in heteronormative organisational setti...
The intersection of age and ageing with organizations has not been extensively addressed in academic...
Age, as an embodied identity and as an organizing principle, has received scant attention in organiz...
The relationship between ageing and sexuality is contentious; older people are frequently represente...
Even in organization studies scholarship that treats gender as performative and fluid, a certain ‘cr...
Studying the aging process of gay men and lesbians is problematic because it assumes that sexual...
Age diversity research calls for new approaches in explaining the persistence of age inequalities, w...
A growing body of literature is challenging understanding of sexuality in later life. The dominance ...
Ageism in the manager–employee relationship is one of the main obstacles towards an age-inclusive wo...
This paper examines the potential of queer ideas for social gerontology and aged care practice. It o...