Abstract: Stories of age do not provide answers to questions about ageing. They do not illustrate gerontological concepts. They can offer comfort, inspiration and possibility. They may not offer any
of those things. Telling and reading stories of age does open up debate and embrace complexity,
and may challenge our ways of thinking. From the trauma of Shakespeare’s bereft King Lear
to the eccentricity of Charles Dickens’ Miss Havisham (Great Expectations 1860) and the ribald effrontery of Angela Carter’s Nora and Dora (Wise Children 1991), ageing-across the life
course-is part of our literary heritage and, according to some, becoming more prominent in
texts from current writers (Oro-Piqueras 2013). Others argue that demographic change is, in
part, responsible for a ‘new coming of age of literature’ (Ramos 2010: 14). There is not space in
this short piece to map fully the way that literature deals with ageing. Instead, the chapter concentrates on a specific aspect of the literary treatment of age: how critics have addressed ageing
and literature, or, to put it another way, how age has emerged as a critical perspective from which
to view literature.
Publication Year: 2015
Publication Date: 2015-06-12
Language: en
Type: article
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 3
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