Introduction: The Time Elapsed

The Introduction highlights broad developments within age studies reflected in this issue of 19. Detecting a shift in emphasis away from concern with representations of the old, it explores heuristic forms of attention to the processes of ageing, its meanings, and its biopolitics across the life cou...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Helen Small
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Open Library of Humanities 2021-06-01
Series:19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Subjects:
Online Access:http://19.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4371/
id doaj-1a8ee8de3cf24c1ca963813a5ab547f9
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1a8ee8de3cf24c1ca963813a5ab547f92021-08-18T09:05:54ZengOpen Library of Humanities19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century1755-15602021-06-0120213210.16995/ntn.4371Introduction: The Time ElapsedHelen Small0English Language and Literature, University of OxfordThe Introduction highlights broad developments within age studies reflected in this issue of 19. Detecting a shift in emphasis away from concern with representations of the old, it explores heuristic forms of attention to the processes of ageing, its meanings, and its biopolitics across the life course. Queer temporalities are a distinct area of critical interest: the non-normative experiences of time generated through narrative attention to non-aligned age perspectives; subjective immersion in the tempos of later life; and — for more radically experimental writers — deliberate departure from age-related ‘realism’ about time. Fruitful connections are opened up here with queer theory, disability studies, and ‘crip time’ theory, admitting allied investments in diversifying expectations for the temporal horizon and subjective experience of living across time. A second area of concentration activates older perspectives and portrays older subjects as representatives of history in ways that lend critical purchase on the present moment. Contributions to the issue show these deployments of old age as ‘anachronism’ serving a wide variety of political agendas. Considering the articles in their historical context of publication, the Covid-19 pandemic, and testing their political claims against the greater visibility it has given to the precariousness of late life, the Introduction predicts an intensification of interest in the activist credentials of age studies, with stronger emphasis to be expected on frameworks of care.http://19.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4371/activismqueer temporalitiessubjectivityrealismformpoetics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helen Small
spellingShingle Helen Small
Introduction: The Time Elapsed
19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
activism
queer temporalities
subjectivity
realism
form
poetics
author_facet Helen Small
author_sort Helen Small
title Introduction: The Time Elapsed
title_short Introduction: The Time Elapsed
title_full Introduction: The Time Elapsed
title_fullStr Introduction: The Time Elapsed
title_full_unstemmed Introduction: The Time Elapsed
title_sort introduction: the time elapsed
publisher Open Library of Humanities
series 19 : Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
issn 1755-1560
publishDate 2021-06-01
description The Introduction highlights broad developments within age studies reflected in this issue of 19. Detecting a shift in emphasis away from concern with representations of the old, it explores heuristic forms of attention to the processes of ageing, its meanings, and its biopolitics across the life course. Queer temporalities are a distinct area of critical interest: the non-normative experiences of time generated through narrative attention to non-aligned age perspectives; subjective immersion in the tempos of later life; and — for more radically experimental writers — deliberate departure from age-related ‘realism’ about time. Fruitful connections are opened up here with queer theory, disability studies, and ‘crip time’ theory, admitting allied investments in diversifying expectations for the temporal horizon and subjective experience of living across time. A second area of concentration activates older perspectives and portrays older subjects as representatives of history in ways that lend critical purchase on the present moment. Contributions to the issue show these deployments of old age as ‘anachronism’ serving a wide variety of political agendas. Considering the articles in their historical context of publication, the Covid-19 pandemic, and testing their political claims against the greater visibility it has given to the precariousness of late life, the Introduction predicts an intensification of interest in the activist credentials of age studies, with stronger emphasis to be expected on frameworks of care.
topic activism
queer temporalities
subjectivity
realism
form
poetics
url http://19.bbk.ac.uk/article/id/4371/
work_keys_str_mv AT helensmall introductionthetimeelapsed
_version_ 1721203394506391552