anger;
aging and emotions;
wisdom;
G. Stanley Hall;
Betty Friedan;
D O I:
10.1016/S0890-4065(02)00090-7
中图分类号:
R4 [临床医学];
R592 [老年病学];
学科分类号:
1002 ;
100203 ;
100602 ;
摘要:
Focusing on two books key to the cultural history of aging in America in the twentieth century-G. Stanley Hall's Senescence: The Last Half of Life [Hall, G. S. (1922, rpt. 1972). Senescence: the last half of life. New York: Arno Press] and Betty Friedan's The Fountain of Age [Friedan, B. (1993). The fountain of age. New York: Simon and Schuster], this essay explores: (1) the cultural reflex of invoking wisdom as the special strength of the old and (2) the strategy of using anger to call attention to ageism. "Against Wisdom" argues that it is difficult, if not virtually impossible, to envision a productive future for the elderly through the joint cultural building blocks of wisdom and anger. A manifesto of sorts, the essay calls for a moratorium on wisdom and suggests that stories of a vitalizing anger at being marginalized because old be told and circulated, and concludes with a story from Barbara Macdonald's Look Me in the Eye: Old Women, Aging, and Ageism. (C) 2003 by the Regents of the University Minnesota. Published by Elsevier Science Inc. All rights reserved.