کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
1081836 | 1486768 | 2015 | 10 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
• Examines questions related to moral reasoning and performance in old age.
• Co-authors draw from medieval literature and social constructivist perspectives.
• Considers the moral significance of living spaces – domestic and institutional.
• Explores remembrance of death in old age as an aspect of moral development.
• Analyzes uses of will in relation to health of social networks and sense of well-being in old age.
Through the lens of Muriel Spark's dark comedic novel, Memento Mori, this paper explores questions of morality, mortality, and the moral choices and performances in old age and in the systems and places of care. Spark's elderly characters are complex moral actors – some virtuous and some decidedly not – who have been receiving mysterious phone calls telling them simply, “Remember you must die.” We, the co-authors, are from two different disciplines, namely Renaissance and medieval literature, and social work and critical gerontology. Among the questions that interest us is the paradox of a master narrative that on the one hand exempts the old from moral criticism yet holds them to a higher moral standard – essentially positioning them as moral nonentities, and relieving the old, their caretakers, and society of moral responsibility. Another is the question of whether moral agency in old age has distinctive aspects, and whether consciousness of one's impending mortality effects moral reasoning and performance. In this paper we offer our individual readings of the ways the novel opens up conceptual space in aging theory, and conclude with our thoughts about what our collaboration suggests for continuing cross-disciplinary dialogue.
Journal: Journal of Aging Studies - Volume 33, April 2015, Pages 76–85