An age of emotion: expertise and subjectivity in old age in Britain, 1937-1970

<p>This thesis heeds W. Andrew Achenbaum’s call for historians of ageing to analyse the inner lives of their subjects. Building on and problematizing existing studies of health and welfare policies for the old, it explores the ways that mid-century public and private life shaped how individua...

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Main Author: Greenhalgh, C
Other Authors: Houlbrook, M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2012
Subjects:
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author Greenhalgh, C
author2 Houlbrook, M
author_facet Houlbrook, M
Greenhalgh, C
author_sort Greenhalgh, C
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description <p>This thesis heeds W. Andrew Achenbaum’s call for historians of ageing to analyse the inner lives of their subjects. Building on and problematizing existing studies of health and welfare policies for the old, it explores the ways that mid-century public and private life shaped how individuals felt about old age. Both public discussions and private narratives of ageing are used to consider how older people understood and expressed their emotional experiences during a challenging period of the life cycle.</p> <p>I argue that old age in general, and its emotional dimensions in particular, are missing from British historiography. Yet both were vital to social life in the mid-century, when the ageing population was an important political issue and a large number of experts hoped to manage the emotional and psychological aspects of this ‘problem’. This thesis begins by setting out this national context for old age, showing that heightened interest in ageing and emotion were significant influences over the expansion of the welfare state. However, contrary to the expectations of mid-century researchers and policy-makers, my subsequent chapters show that older people frequently maintained their social roles and relationships through informal means. This thesis explores how ageing men and women engaged with work, retirement, ill health, marriage, bereavement, fashion, beauty culture, and autobiography as opportunities to find meaning in late life.</p> <p>Together, these varied perspectives on old age make a series of interventions in its history. I argue that historians could do much more to detail the significance of the life cycle for their subjects, whether they write political, social, or cultural history. As this thesis shows, such studies should approach ageing as a lifelong and personal process, which has been shaped by reminiscence and story-telling. I suggest that historians of emotion are best-equipped to write scholarship that is sensitive to the passing of time and personal biography in this way.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:18c215e1-a9fe-43ac-9879-9a8da86788362024-12-01T15:29:08ZAn age of emotion: expertise and subjectivity in old age in Britain, 1937-1970Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:18c215e1-a9fe-43ac-9879-9a8da8678836AgeingModern Britain and EuropeOlder personsHistory of Britain and EuropeEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2012Greenhalgh, CHoulbrook, M<p>This thesis heeds W. Andrew Achenbaum’s call for historians of ageing to analyse the inner lives of their subjects. Building on and problematizing existing studies of health and welfare policies for the old, it explores the ways that mid-century public and private life shaped how individuals felt about old age. Both public discussions and private narratives of ageing are used to consider how older people understood and expressed their emotional experiences during a challenging period of the life cycle.</p> <p>I argue that old age in general, and its emotional dimensions in particular, are missing from British historiography. Yet both were vital to social life in the mid-century, when the ageing population was an important political issue and a large number of experts hoped to manage the emotional and psychological aspects of this ‘problem’. This thesis begins by setting out this national context for old age, showing that heightened interest in ageing and emotion were significant influences over the expansion of the welfare state. However, contrary to the expectations of mid-century researchers and policy-makers, my subsequent chapters show that older people frequently maintained their social roles and relationships through informal means. This thesis explores how ageing men and women engaged with work, retirement, ill health, marriage, bereavement, fashion, beauty culture, and autobiography as opportunities to find meaning in late life.</p> <p>Together, these varied perspectives on old age make a series of interventions in its history. I argue that historians could do much more to detail the significance of the life cycle for their subjects, whether they write political, social, or cultural history. As this thesis shows, such studies should approach ageing as a lifelong and personal process, which has been shaped by reminiscence and story-telling. I suggest that historians of emotion are best-equipped to write scholarship that is sensitive to the passing of time and personal biography in this way.</p>
spellingShingle Ageing
Modern Britain and Europe
Older persons
History of Britain and Europe
Greenhalgh, C
An age of emotion: expertise and subjectivity in old age in Britain, 1937-1970
title An age of emotion: expertise and subjectivity in old age in Britain, 1937-1970
title_full An age of emotion: expertise and subjectivity in old age in Britain, 1937-1970
title_fullStr An age of emotion: expertise and subjectivity in old age in Britain, 1937-1970
title_full_unstemmed An age of emotion: expertise and subjectivity in old age in Britain, 1937-1970
title_short An age of emotion: expertise and subjectivity in old age in Britain, 1937-1970
title_sort age of emotion expertise and subjectivity in old age in britain 1937 1970
topic Ageing
Modern Britain and Europe
Older persons
History of Britain and Europe
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AT greenhalghc ageofemotionexpertiseandsubjectivityinoldageinbritain19371970