Andrea Charise, David W. McAllister, D. Looser, Jacob Jewusiak, R. M. McAdams, T. Lau
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Recorded in January 2020, this roundtable is a curated compilation of conversations with key scholars in the field: Devoney Looser (Arizona State University), David McAllister (Birkbeck, University of London), Ruth M. McAdams (Skidmore College), Jake Jewusiak (Newcastle University), and Travis Chi Wing Lau (Kenyon College). Edited by Andrea Charise, this roundtable assembles new perspectives on the present and future of nineteenth-century studies of age(ing), including: What’s next for age studies’ approaches to reading and teaching nineteenth-century texts? How might a better understanding of ‘old’ models inform our current day concerns with ageing populations and intergenerational discord? Can age studies research help make a case for the enduring role of the arts and humanities in a STEM-dominated culture? And how might attending to the old, ageing, and obsolete help address newly emergent global crises, including the rise of populism and climate change? 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引用次数: 0
摘要
在过去的十年里,一些学术研究已经把19世纪的老龄化作为他们的主题,包括Devoney Looser的《英国的女作家和老年》(2008),Karen Chase的《维多利亚时代和老年》(2009),Kay Heath的《书本上的老龄化》(2009),以及Alice Crossley的《19世纪性别研究》特刊(2017)。随着Andrea Charise的《衰老美学》(2020)和Jacob Jewusiak的《衰老、持续时间和英语小说》(2019)这两本重要的新专著的出版,对这一动态学术集群进行综合的时机已经成熟,特别关注19世纪关于衰老的观点正在走向何方,以及应该走向何方。记录在2020年1月,这个圆桌会议是与该领域的主要学者对话的策划汇编:Devoney Looser(亚利桑那州立大学),David McAllister(伦敦大学伯克贝克分校),Ruth M. McAdams(斯基德莫尔学院),Jake Jewusiak(纽卡斯尔大学)和Travis Chi Wing Lau(凯尼恩学院)。这个圆桌会议由Andrea Charise编辑,汇集了关于19世纪年龄研究的现在和未来的新观点,包括:年龄研究在阅读和教授19世纪文本方面的下一步是什么?对“旧”模式的更好理解,会如何影响我们当前对人口老龄化和代际不和的关注?年龄研究是否有助于证明艺术和人文学科在stem主导的文化中发挥的持久作用?关注老年人、老龄化和落伍人群如何有助于解决新出现的全球危机,包括民粹主义的兴起和气候变化?这次圆桌访谈以音频和文本两种形式提供,为研究人员、学生和对老龄化和老年文学的现状和未来感兴趣的更广泛的公众提供了及时的资源。
Bending the Clock: New Perspectives on Nineteenth-Century Ageing: A Roundtable Conversation
Over the past decade, several academic studies have taken nineteenth-century ageing as their topic, including Devoney Looser’s Women Writers and Old Age in Great Britain (2008), Karen Chase’s The Victorians and Old Age (2009), Kay Heath’s Aging by the Book (2009), and Alice Crossley’s special issue of Nineteenth-Century Gender Studies (2017). Following the publication of two significant new monographs — Andrea Charise’s The Aesthetics of Senescence (2020) and Jacob Jewusiak’s Aging, Duration, and the English Novel (2019) — the time is ripe for a synthesis of this dynamic cluster of scholarship, with special attention to where nineteenth-century perspectives on ageing is going, and ought to go, from here. Recorded in January 2020, this roundtable is a curated compilation of conversations with key scholars in the field: Devoney Looser (Arizona State University), David McAllister (Birkbeck, University of London), Ruth M. McAdams (Skidmore College), Jake Jewusiak (Newcastle University), and Travis Chi Wing Lau (Kenyon College). Edited by Andrea Charise, this roundtable assembles new perspectives on the present and future of nineteenth-century studies of age(ing), including: What’s next for age studies’ approaches to reading and teaching nineteenth-century texts? How might a better understanding of ‘old’ models inform our current day concerns with ageing populations and intergenerational discord? Can age studies research help make a case for the enduring role of the arts and humanities in a STEM-dominated culture? And how might attending to the old, ageing, and obsolete help address newly emergent global crises, including the rise of populism and climate change? Accessible in both audio format and textual transcription, this roundtable interview offers a timely resource for researchers, students, and a broader public interested in the literary present and futures of ageing and older age.