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AGEING: Histories, Mythologies and Taboos

The Literature and Science Research group held an Interdisciplinary Conference on ageing, 30 and 31 January, 2015.

Painting of The Three Ages of Man
"The Three Ages of Man" by the painter Giorgione.

Hovedinnhold

The Literature and Science Research group invites to an Interdisciplinary Conference on ageing, 30 and 31 January.

The conference language is English.

There is a growing awareness that the "ageing wave" will challenge society not only economically but also in terms of philosophical, ethical, aesthetic, and religious views and values.

Today the urgency of defining strategies to ensure the rights and welfare of the elderly is widely recognized. But it is equally important to acknowledge the symbolic aspects of ageing and the formative power culture and society exert on public and private conceptions of the aged self.

The new humanistic gerontology has over the last decades addressed these issues, using interpretation, rhetoric, and narrative to counteract dehumanizing tendencies in cultural stereotypes of ageing as well as in society's treatment of the elderly.


More about the conference

Conference Programme (pdf)

Conference Abstracts

 

The Research group "Literature and Science" invites scholars of literature, the arts, and the medical humanities, as well as philosophers, cultural historians, historians of religion, sociologists, and anthropologists to explore representations of ageing and late life in social, cultural, and personal contexts. Drawing upon interdisciplinary studies of literature and medicine, we believe an approach to old age rooted in the humanities, could interact with gerontology and pursue goals that are significant not only for gerontology's interest groups. Ageing is particularly relevant to the humanities and the social sciences because it represents both a fundamental dimension of human existence, and a marginalised existential mode. It is a prerequisite for understanding human temporality and for addressing the construction and dissolution of identity, language, and meaning. As a persistent taboo it represents a psychological blind spot, a sphere of denial or oblivion awaiting recognition and analysis.

Critical interpretations of the symbolic dimensions of old age in past and present societies are necessary to elucidate alienating simplifications and enforce a nuanced understanding of late life. Reformulating the insight of Susan Sontag’s essay "Illness as Metaphor", we see the need of liberation from stereotypes in order to acknowledge our second citizenship in the kingdom of the old. But it is also the humanities' task to restore and reinterpret our cultures' formative myths, metaphors, and narratives, and thus enrich the figurative reservoirs on which modern individuals continue to model their selves. Detailed, in-depth studies of verbal and visual representations within the wide historical range of philosophical, religious, ethical, and aesthetic responses to the question of what it means to grow old is a task which scholars of the humanities and social sciences should deal with, and which an ageing society’s self-understanding depends on.