Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1082001 | Journal of Aging Studies | 2011 | 8 Pages |
This paper explores the role of abjection in understanding and interpreting the dichotomy between the ‘third’ and the ‘fourth’ age. We use Kristeva's term abjection to refer to a realm of decay, disease and impurity that embodies the capacity to disgust. While there is a longstanding tradition of representing the aged body as an object of disgust, recent cultural, economic and political changes have undermined the solidity and stability of age and its bodily signifiers. A new potential to transgress the abjection of a long life and an aged appearance has been matched however by an intensification of ‘real’ old age with even less capacity to transgress the abjection that is associated with frailty and the loss of agency and symbolized by the fourth age. Appeals to a universal ontology of human vulnerability and/or the redeeming influence of intimate care are considered as possible sources of protection from such abjection.