Power and Poverty: Old Age in the Pre-Industrial Past
By (Author) Susannah R. Ottaway
Edited by Lynn A. Botelho
Edited by Katharine Kittredge
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th October 2002
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Age groups: the elderly
305.2609
Hardback
312
Brings to light exciting new research on the history of old age demonstrating many ways in which advanced age was associated with authority in the pre-industrial past, challenging existing literature's focus on the dependence and disability of older people who lived in the period. Despite calls since the 1970s for more research into the history of old age, there is still a relative dearth of historical studies on the elderly, especially in the pre-industrial past. This volume remedies much of that deficiency with essays exploring the lives of old men and old women, and the images of old age and aging, in early modern Europe and America. Collectively, the chapters demonstrate there was a strong association of advanced age with authority in the lived experience of older men and women. This book recognizes poverty and physical limitations were a very real threat, but challenges the tendency of existing literature on historical gerontology to associate old age with dependence and disability. Instead, what emerges from this volume is the success of older people in the past in imbuing their old age with dignity, despite the often vicious nature of old age in both popular and elite literature. Essays are brought together on old age in early modern England, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and America, enabling comparisons that cross geographical boundaries. Historians of old age, the family, demography, social history and cultural history will value this volume, as will sociologists and anthropologists interested in gerontology.
SUSANNAH R. OTTAWAY is Assistant Professor in the History Department at Carleton College. L.A. BOTELHO is Associate Professor in the History Department at Indiana University of Pennsylvania. KATHARINE KITTREDGE is Associate Professor in the English Department at Ithaca College.