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The Journey of Life: A Cultural History of Aging in America
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1994
Year
Cultural GerontologyAgingAgeismCultural StudiesAging ProcessPopulation AgingLongevityVictorian MoralsCultural HistoryGerontologyLanguage StudiesVictorian AmericaSocial GerontologyGlobal AgingLifespan AgingPopular Health ReformCultureLater AdulthoodAnthropologyMedicineCultural AnthropologyLife CourseModernity
List of illustrations Preface Introduction Part I. The Ages of Life and the Journey of Life: Transcendental Ideals: 1. Aging in the Western tradition: cultural origins of the modern life course 2. The aging pilgrim's progress in the New World 3. 'Death without order': the late Calvinist ideal of aging Part II. The Dualism of Aging in Victorian America: 4. Antebellum revivals and Victorian morals: the ideological origins of ageism 5. Popular health reform and the legitimation of longevity, 1830-1870 6. Aging, popular art, and Romantic religion in mid-Victorian culture 7. In a different voice: self-help and the ideal of 'civilized' old age, 1850-1910 Part III. Science and the Ideal of Normal Aging: 8. The aging of 'civilized' morality: the fixed period versus prolongevity, 1870-1925 9. Toward the scientific management of aging: the formative literature of gerontology and geriatrics, 1890-1930 10. The prophecy of Senescence: G. Stanley Hall and the reconstruction of old age Epilogue: beyond dualism and control - reflections on aging in postmodern culture Index.