Partners
European Partners
Center for Gender and Diversity (NL)
The Center for Gender and Diversity (CGD) develops and offers tuition
(e.g., Minor Crucial Differences) and engages in and develops research into the
field of Gender and Diversity Studies (e.g., Aagje Swinnen’s Veni project
"The Study of the Literary Imagination of Reminiscence in the Reifungs-
and Vollendungsroman from a Genre and Gender Perspective" – NWO). The
Center has built valuable expertise in the study of cultural representations
(e.g., Maaike Meijer's Kritiek van representatie, 1996) and theories of
intersectionality, or the interplay of prominent identity markers such as age,
gender and disability (e.g., the project “Beyond Autonomy and Language: Towards
a Disability Studies Perspective on
Dementia” – ZonMw). In 2009, the CGD organized the conference “Points of Exit:
(Un)Conventional Representations of Age, Parenting, and Sexuality" to
celebrate its 10th anniversary (March 29-30, 2009). CGD is one of the founding
members of the European Network in Aging Studies for which Aagje Swinnen
secured funding in the NWO program Internationalization in the Humanities.
Within the framework of the project “Live to Be a Hundred: Cultural Narratives
of Longevity,” the CGD hosted the inaugural ENAS conference “Theorizing Age:
Challenging the Disciplines,” October 6-9, 2011.
Participating members: Ruud Hendriks (Assistant Professor, Department of
Philosophy), Ike Kamphof (Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy), Aagje
Swinnen (Assistant Professor, CGD), Annette Hendrikx (Researcher, CGD) and
Elena Fronk (PhD candidate, Department of Literature and Art)
WAM Research Group (UK)
The Women,
Ageing and Media Research Group (WAM) secured Arts and Humanities Research
Council (AHRC) funding in order to study the relationship between older women
as consumers, producers and subjects of media with a special focus on
proliferating print and screen representations of older women. The group aims
to position emerging research on older women in media and cultural studies
alongside established research in healthcare policy, gerontology, economics,
social care and sociology that dominates existing knowledge. This resulted so
far in the international WAM conference in Cheltenham (5 December 2008) and a
series of workshops, namely "Emotional Affect" (2 July 2008),
"Visibility/Invisibility" (10 September 2008), "Scary
Bodies" (24 October 2008) and "Consumerism and Commodification"
(12 November 2008).WAM have also given the following panel presentations:
‘Women, Ageing, Media’ at MECCSA Conference 2007 and ‘Screen Performance and
Age ‘at Screen Conference 2010.
Participating
members of WAM come from the Faculty of Arts, Culture,
Education, University of the West of England: Josephine Dolan (Associate
Professor in Film Studies), Sherryl Wilson (Associate Professor in Media
and Cultural Studies), Estella Tincknell (Reader in Media and Cultural
Studies); Kristyn Gorton (Assistant Professor, Department of Theatre, Film
& Television), University of York:); from University of Gloucestershire
Joanne Garde-Hansen (Associate Professor in Media, Communication and Culture),
Abigail Gardner (Associate Professor in Media, Communication and Culture), and
Ros Jennings (Reader in Cultural Studies, Director of WAM and Head of
Postgraduate Research, University of Gloucestershire), Eva Krainitzki (
PhD candidate) and Kate Latham (PhD candidate).
Grup Dedal-Lit, University of Lleida (ES)
Grup Dedal-Lit is currently conducting research into aging as represented
in literature written in English. The group has undertaken and completed
several research projects, such as "Perceptions of Ageing in Contemporary
English Literature," a project financed by the Spanish Ministry of Science
and Technology. In 2002, Grup Dedal-Lit organized "The Art of Ageing: An
International, Interdisciplinary Conference on Textualising the Phases of
Life" (6-8 November). In 2008 it set up the "6th International
Symposium on Cultural Gerontology: Extending Time, Emerging Realities,
Imagining Response" (16-18 October). Both conferences were funded mainly
by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation. Since 2002, Grup Dedal-Lit
publications have focused specifically on aging. The Dedal-Lit series includes The
Aesthetics of Ageing: Critical Approaches to Literary Representations of
the Ageing Process (Eds. Maria O'Neill and Carmen Zamorano-Llena, 2002), The
Polemics of Ageing as Reflected in Literatures in English (Eds. Maria Vidal-Grau
and Núria Casado-Gual, 2004), Women Ageing Through Literature and Experience
(Ed. Brian J. Worsfold, 2005), The Art of Ageing: Textualising the
Phases of Life (Ed. Brian J. Worsfold, 2005), and Anthology of Cultural
Ageing: Testimonies from Catalonia and England (Eds. Maricel
Oró-Piqueras and Marta Miquel-Baldellou). Acculturating
Age: Approaches to Cultural Gerontology (Ed. Brian J. Worsfold) is
scheduled for publication in Spring 2011.
Participating members: Brian J. Worsfold (Full Professor, UdL), Núria
Casado-Gual (Assistant Professor, UdL), Emma Domínguez-Rué (Assistant
Professor, UdL), Maria del Carmen Farré-Vidal (Assistant Professor, UdL), Billy
Gray (Associate Professor, Högskolan Dalarna, Falun, SE), Marta
Miquel-Baldellou (PhD candidate, UdL), Maricel Oró-Piqueras (Assistant
Professor, UdL), Maria Vidal-Grau
(Associate Professor, UdL), and Carmen Zamorano-Llena (Assistant Professor,
Högskolan Dalarna, Falun, SE).
NISAL, Linköping University (SE)
At the National Institute for the Study of Ageing and Later Life (NISAL),
the interplay between the cultural, social, technical, and health aspects of
aging in modern societies is studied. Research is conducted through major and
minor projects within three broad fields: (1) Socio-cultural, political and
historical contexts; (2) Care and welfare; (3) Aging in time and space: home,
housing and technological landscapes. The researchers within the first field
have a distinct humanities' profile. They focus on how people "do"
old age, how age is used and negotiated in various social contexts and
historical times, and how the aging body is constructed in various social and
cultural discourses. The group has special expertise in research on how older
people, as a category, are understood and described in public discourses. NISAL
has a graduate school and publishes the peer-reviewed International Journal of Ageing and Later Life (IJAL).
Participating members: Lars Andersson (Full Professor, NISAL), Eva Jeppson-Grassman
(Full Professor, NISAL), Sandra Torres (Full Professor, NISAL), Jan-Erik
Hagberg (Associate Professor, NISAL), Catharina Nord (Associate Professor,
NISAL), and Peter Öberg (Associate Professor, Gävle University)
Research Group “Aging Studies” at the Center
for Inter-American Studies (C.IAS), Graz (AT)
The researchers at C.IAS at the University of
Graz focus on the cultural and literary representations the matrix of time and
experience, forming the primary research group in cultural gerontology in
Austria. Its scholars were the driving force for the establishment of the
European Network in Aging Studies. Roberta Maierhofer, the Center’s director
and a pioneer in the field of Aging Studies has been working on the cultural
representation of age and aging since the 1990s and coined the term
“anocriticism” (Salty Old Women,
2003). She is also the academic director of the University Course (MA) in
Interdisciplinary Gerontology at the University of Graz. Prof. Maierhofer
further set up the peer-reviewed book series Aging Studies (transcript
Verlag) in 2009 (with Heike Hartung and Ulla Kriebernegg). The book series
has since then been dedicated to the ENAS network and the publications can be
found in the Publications section.
Current
research includes Roberta Maierhofer’s project “Cultural Narratives, Processes
and Strategies in Urban and Regional Representations of Age and Aging”
(together with Michael Greger and Barbara Ratzenboeck), which aims to provide
on the one hand a systematic approach to representations of age and aging
through offering a theoretical guide for the investigation of cultural
narratives of aging and on the other hand tries to establish a text corpus
through qualitative interviews for insights into life course narratives within
the Austrian context. A further project is Ulla Kriebernegg’s habilitation
project “Locating Life: Intersections of Age and Space”, in which she
investigates contemporary Canadian and US American cultural representations of
old age with a special focus on retirement- and nursing homes. Heidrun Moertl
is currently working on her doctoral thesis “Representations of Time and Aging
in American Indian Culture. Anishinaabe People Stating an Example”, in which
she focuses on indigenous approaches to old age common in Anishinaabe societies
throughout the Great Lakes area.
Participating members: Roberta Maierhofer
(Professor and Director), Ulla Kriebernegg (Assistant Professor), Heidrun
Moertl (Scientist /PhD candidate), Barbara Ratzenboeck (Research Assistant)
German Aging
Studies Group (DE)
The German
Aging Studies group is an informal network of scholars from Germany who share a
research interest in the representation of aging and old age in literature and
culture.
As part of
ENAS, the European Network of Aging Studies, it intends to foster an
interdisciplinary dialogue on the aging process as a (trans-)personal,
transnational and transcultural phenomenon. In privileging a cultural studies
approach our aim is to generate new critical tools for understanding the aging
process. One focus is therefore the development of transdisciplinary research
methods for a better understanding of the diverse forms of knowledge about age
and aging.
By
highlighting the dynamic aspects of aging across the life course, we wish to
determine the shifting roles and meanings of age. A humanist focus on
gerontology will make the potential for development in aging societies visible.
By interrogating critical concepts in gerontology, it will also help to analyse
the limits of this development.
The group
stimulates exchange between its members, as well as other groups within the
ENAS network, by means of the organization of international workshops,
conferences and lecture series such as the conference “Aging Stories: Narrative
Constructions of Age and Gender” (Greifswald 2006), the lecture series “Social
Constructions of Aging. Demographic Change from a Cultural Studies perspective”
(Luxembourg/Cologne 2006), the lecture series “Under construction. Aging in an
Aging Society” (Cologne 2006/2007), the workshop “Methods of Aging Studies from
a Cultural Studies Perspective” (Vienna/Cologne 2007), the transdisciplinary
conference “Growing Older – New Beginnings. Configuring Aging in Japan and
Germany” (Cologne 2008), the workshop "Aging Studies & the Futures of
Cultural Studies" (Potsdam 2009), the symposium “Over the Hill. Locations
of Age between Utopia and Heterotopia” (Braunschweig 2009), the annual
conference of the National University Network of Senior's Studies, Germany (BAG
WiWA): “Research Activities of Senior Students” (Cologne 2009), the lecture
series “Demographic Change: Challenges in Aging Societies” (Cologne 2010), the
workshop “Rewriting Ambivalence: The Concept of Ambivalence in Aging (and
Generational) Studies” (Cologne/Luxembourg 2011).
Participating
Members: Rüdiger Kunow (Full Professor, Chair of American Studies, Department
of English and American Studies, University of Potsdam), Andrea von Hülsen Esch
(Full Professor, Department of Philosophy, Heinrich-Heine University
Düsseldorf), Heike Hartung (Postdoctoral Fellow, Department of English and
American Studies, University of Potsdam), Miriam Haller (Senior Scientist,
Center for Aging Studies (CEfAS), University of Cologne),Thomas Küpper (Acting
Professor for Media Studies, Goethe-University, Frankfurt), Hartmut
Meyer-Wolters (Associate Professor, Head of the Center for Aging Studies
(CefAS), University of Cologne), Sabine Kampmann (Assistant Professor, Insitut
für Kunstwissenschaften, Braunschweig University of Arts)
Associated US Partners
NWSA Aging and Ageism Caucus (USA)
Established in 1977, the National Women's Studies Association (NWSA) leads
the field of American women's studies and gender studies in educational and
social transformation. The NWSA has more than 2,000 members worldwide, and its
U.S.-based annual conference regularly draws more than 1,500 attendees. The
Aging and Ageism Caucus (AAS) of the NWSA has been sponsoring regular panels
and other plenary sessions at the NWSA Annual Conference for more than a
decade. The Caucus represents a diverse group of scholars and activists
committed to resisting ageism within and without the organization, educating
people about ageism, and furthering the field of Aging Studies and Age Studies
as an area of academic inquiry.
Participating members: Erin Gentry Lamb (Assistant Professor of Biomedical
Humanities, Hiram College, current caucus co-chair), Pamela Gravagne (PhD
candidate in American Studies, University of New Mexico, current caucus
co-chair), Leni Marshall (Assistant Professor in the Department of English and
Philosophy, University of Wisconsin-Stout), Peg Cruikshank (Assistant Professor
in Women's Studies, University of Southern Maine) and Margaret Morganroth
Gullette (Resident Scholar at the Women's Studies Research Center, Brandeis
University)
MLA Age Studies Discussion Group (USA)
Founded in 1883, the Modern Language Association (MLA) is an international
professional organization for researchers and teachers of literature and
languages, with more than 30,000 members in over 100 countries. The mission of
the MLA’s Age Studies Discussion Group (ASDG) is to benefit the association and
serve as a valuable resource for researchers and educators in the field of age
studies. To achieve this goal, researchers explore the implications of
differences of age across the lifespan and the intersections of age with other
categories of identity in literature, media, and culture, particularly focusing
on considerations of aging and old age. Educators incorporate age studies
concepts into pedagogies of literature, language, and writing. We encourage
scholars to explore the impact of their own and others’ age-based stereotypes,
the benefits and frustration of aging, and the potential inherent in aging and
old age beyond the boundaries of essentialist, reductive valuations. The ASDG supports
examinations of cultural assumptions and research about age and age-based
discriminations, including responses and resistance.
Participating members: Ted Anton (Full Professor, English Department,
DePaul University), Elizabeth Gregory (Full Professor of English, and Director
of Women's Studies, University of Houston), E. Ann Kaplan (Full Professor of
English, and Director of the Humanities Institute, State University of New York
– Stony Brook), Devoney Looser (Full Professor of English, University of
Missouri), Kathleen Woodward (Full Professor and Director of the Simpson Center
for the Humanities, University of Washington), Michelle Massé (Full Professor,
Women's and Gender Studies, and English, Louisiana State University), Teresa
Mangum (Associate Professor, English, International Studies, University of
Iowa), Leni Marshall (Assistant Professor in the Department of English and
Philosophy, University of Wisconsin-Stout), Cynthia Port (Assistant Professor
of English, Carolina Costal University) and Valerie Lipscomb (Instructor of
English, Director of the Writing Resource Center, University of South Florida,
Sarasota-Manatee)
News
The Becoming of Age: Cinematic visions of mind, body and identity in later life
forthcoming
Aging, Narrative, and Performance: Essays from the Humanities
A special issue of the International Journal of Ageing and Later Life
Thematic Issue of the Journal of Lesbian Studies
Call for Papers
International Women, Ageing and Media Research Summer School
Call for Abstracts
Mirror Mirror: Representations and reflections on age and ageing
A two-day event hosted by the London College of Fashion.
Age, Culture, Humanities - An Interdisciplinary Journal
Announcement of Publication
