Hyppää sisältöön
    • Suomeksi
    • In English
  • Suomeksi
  • In English
  • Kirjaudu
Näytä aineisto 
  •   Etusivu
  • 3. UTUCris-artikkelit
  • Rinnakkaistallenteet
  • Näytä aineisto
  •   Etusivu
  • 3. UTUCris-artikkelit
  • Rinnakkaistallenteet
  • Näytä aineisto
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Winding Down, Living On: The Future in Old Age

Avril Tynan

Winding Down, Living On: The Future in Old Age

Avril Tynan
Katso/Avaa
Winding Down, Living On Storyworlds Revised Jan 15.docx (63.68Kb)
Lataukset: 

doi:10.5250/storyworlds.10.1-2.0047
URI
https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/Publication/50840572
Näytä kaikki kuvailutiedot
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042821236
Tiivistelmä

Our ability to think
about the future beyond our own mortal existence is particularly complex,
limited by our ability to imagine the world as it will continue to exist
without us. Can we think of the future
beyond the point of our own mortality? Can we imagine the world as it continues
to turn without us, and could this ability help us to
live better now? In this article, I combine moral philosophical and psychological
approaches together with narrative fiction to demonstrate how we may be able to
imagine the future as an extension of our own life story that lives on in and
through others. In particular, I concentrate on the
process of aging, which is typically subsumed under dominant cultural scripts
of meaningless, decline, and fallibility. Older adults, it is assumed, think
only of the past because they have no future worth caring about. Yet old age, I
contend, is primarily concerned with the future. A greater understanding of aging
as a steady process of reorientation towards others and towards the future may
help us all to engage with notions of intersubjectivity, altruism, and
responsibility today. Through a discussion of Paul
Harding’s Pulitzer Prize winning Tinkers
(2009), I argue that the aged protagonist in this end-of-life story
thinks of the past not because he lacks hope or has only memories to comfort
him, but as part of an ongoing process that orients him towards a future that
will continue to unfold after his death. The subject’s recognition that the
death of the self is not a definitive end but, for others, a lived experience
that is integrated into their continuing lives helps us to move away from an
understanding of old age as selfishly oriented towards the past, and towards an
understanding of old age as future- and other-oriented. Tinkers shows us, in sensitive and imaginative ways, that life will go on
without us.

Kokoelmat
  • Rinnakkaistallenteet [19207]

Turun yliopiston kirjasto | Turun yliopisto
julkaisut@utu.fi | Tietosuoja | Saavutettavuusseloste
 

 

Tämä kokoelma

JulkaisuajatTekijätNimekkeetAsiasanatTiedekuntaLaitosOppiaineYhteisöt ja kokoelmat

Omat tiedot

Kirjaudu sisäänRekisteröidy

Turun yliopiston kirjasto | Turun yliopisto
julkaisut@utu.fi | Tietosuoja | Saavutettavuusseloste