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  • Linking Ages: A Dialogue between Childhood and Ageing Research

    Linking Ages by Wanka, Anna; Freutel-Funke, Tabea; Andresen, Sabine;

    A Dialogue between Childhood and Ageing Research

    Series: Routledge Advances in Sociology;

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    Short description:

    By asking what childhood and ageing research can learn from each other, this edited volume brings both fields into a fruitful dialogue. 

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    Long description:

    When we ponder about whether it is time to finish a degree, start a family, or retire, we often draw on age to make an assessment: When are we too young, or too old, to do something – and what age is the right one? Age, thereby, is a central social category for Western societies: more than gender, ethnicity or social status age affects our social position, networks, lifestyles and aspirations.


    By asking what childhood and ageing research can learn from each other, this edited volume brings both fields into a fruitful dialogue. It touches upon topics like theories and method(olog)ies, space and time, health and care, technologies and digitalization, play, work and consumption, as well as violence, well-being and childrens’ and older peoples’ rights.


    This volume will appeal to scholars and students interested in childhood studies and ageing studies/gerontology located in a range of disciplines, from sociology to social work, social and cultural anthropology, educational sciences, human geography, architecture, urban planning, architecture, health and disability studies, nursing studies, political sciences and law.

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    Table of Contents:

    Section I: Theories of childhood and later life


    Linking Ages – An Invitation to a New Agenda in Life Stage Research


    1. Age Matters: Linking Age-Related Concepts in Childhood and Ageing Research


    2. I just want to help! – Autonomy violation in children and older adults


    Section II: Method(ologie)s of childhood and ageing research


    3. Rethinking Life Stories in the Context of Civic Engagement: The Life Diagram and its Potential for Ageing and Childhood Research


    4. Linking Ages: Developing Walking Methods for Lifecourse Research


    5. ‘I wish they’d stop eating the props!’ – Two Novice Researchers’ Refection on their Participatory Research with Children and Older People


    6. Linking Ages - Reflexive Transition Research in Childhood and Later Life through Interpretations with Change of Sign


    Section III: Empirical insights from a Linking-Ages perspective


    IIIa. Ageing in time and place


    7. Age Transitions Crossing Childhood, Youth and Old Age: Approaching Space and Age Relationally from an Urban Everyday Life Perspective


    8. Age-based representations of time. Re-thinking temporalities through intergenerational encounters


    IIIb. Playfulness as a link between childhood and later life 


    9. Play Across the Life Course: An Anthropology of Play in Childhood and Old Age


    10. Planning for Play


    IIIc. Growing up and old in a digitized world


    11. Technological Relationality and Transforming Perceptions of Childhood


    12. "What shall I write tomorrow?" When older women reclaim new life course on Facebook


    IIId. Un/doing age in work and consumption


    13. In and out of the labour market – A Linking Ages Perspective on labour market transitions in early and late adulthood


    14. Different life phases and the limits of consumption: opportunities and barriers


    IIIe. Experiencing violence in childhood and later life


    15. Testimonies about child sexual abuse in the 1950s. Bearing witness and the concept of linking ages


    16. Does an abusive family history cause elder abuse and neglect?


    17. Protection From Violence in Home Care Settings for Older Adults and Lessons Learned from Child Protection


    18. Un/Doing Violence and Un/Doing Care – Mapping Boundary-Making Practices of Violence in Elder Care from a Transdisciplinary Perspective


    IIIf. Linking Ages perspectives on health and care


    19. Children of old age? Infantilization of people living with dementia


    20. To be Seen and Heard: Relational Caring Meets Lived Childhoods in Relationships Between Young Children and People Living with Dementia in Long-term Care Homes


    21. The generational conflict as a social construct of certainty to manage the ambiguities of the corona crisis


    IIIg. Children’s and older adults’ rights and wellbeing


    22. ‘I thought I was going to die’:  Bodily Autonomy and the Misuse of Restrictive Practices in Aged Care and Youth Detention Settings


    23. Revisiting the Cascais Protocol – Age constructions and reconstruction in an ageing policy design process


    24. Investigating the Association between Childhood Circumstances and Old Age Quality in Ghana


    Conclusion


    25. Conclusions: A Linking Ages Dialogue between Childhood, Age Studies, and Beyond 

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