Publication | Closed Access
A Fresh Map of Life: The Emergence of the Third Age.
1.1K
Citations
0
References
1990
Year
Historical GeographyAgingAgeismHuman ConditionSocial StratificationSocial ChangeSocial SciencesEconomics Of AgingPopulation AgingLongevityNew DivisionLifespan DevelopmentUrban HistoryCultural HistoryGerontologyRectangular Survival CurveFresh MapGeriatricsSocial ClassSocial GerontologyHuman ProgressGlobal AgingAdult DevelopmentElderly WellbeingCultureHistorical TransitionThird AgeSociologyDevelopmental ScienceLater AdulthoodEthnographyAnthropologyCulture ChangeDemographySocial PolicyMedicineSocial AnthropologyCultural AnthropologyLife CourseModernity
Preface - A New Division of the Life Course - How Long Can Anyone Go On Living - The Age of Britain as a Country: Britain be Your Age, First Adjuration - The Age of the Present British Population, with a Glimpse into its Future. Britain be Your Age, Second Adjuration - The Rectangular Survival Curve and the Secular Shift in Ageing - The Emergence of the Third Age - Hostile and Demeaning Descriptions of the Elderly - The Insufficiency of the Family Group, in the Past and in the Present - Retirement and its Social History: Kin and Collectivity in Support of the Old - The General Theory of the Third Age - The Obsolescence of the Educational System, and the University of the Third Age - The Burden of the Elderly and Paying for your own Third Age - The Responsibilities of Older British People - Bibliography - Index