1st Edition

Cultures of Ageing and Ageism in India

Edited By Kaustav Bakshi, Paromita Chakravarti Copyright 2024
268 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

268 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

268 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge India

This book examines the discourses on ageing and ageism in Indian culture, politics, art and society. It explores its representations and the anxieties, fears and vulnerabilities associated with ageing. The volume looks at ageing within the contexts of the larger discourses of gender, sexuality, nation, health and the performance and politics of ageing. The chapters grapple with diverse issues... Read more

List of Figures. Acknowledgements. Introduction 1 The Power of Vulnerability: Age, Activism and the “Daadis” 2 From maintenance to care-ing: the aged in times of changing familial geographies 3 Queering chrononormativity in India: challenges and possibilities 4 Care, Intimacy and Shifting Power: The Ageing Body within and without the “Family” 5 Precarious lives, caring networks and queer ageing 6 Physical Cultures and the Ageing Body: The Long Careers of Manohar Aich and Biswanath Datta 7 Umar Ka Lihaz: Ageism in Indian Classical Dance 8 More than Memories: Aging and the Attachment to Material Objects in Three Indian Short Stories 9 "Second Childishness and Mere Oblivion": Indian films on Dementia and the Idea of Ageing Differently 10 His Master Voice: Amitabh Bachchan, Aural Stardom and the Ageless Baritone 11 Actor as a Time-Traveller: Politics of Performing Age Onstage 12 Ageing, Caring and Mortality 13 Loneliness, Belatedness and Care: Arriving Late Where You No Longer Are. Index.

Biography

Paromita Chakravarti (D.Phil, Oxon.) is Professor of English, and has been the Director of the School of Women's Studies, Jadavpur University, Kolkata. She teaches Renaissance drama, women's writing, sexuality and film studies and introduced the first Masters course in Queer Studies in India (2005). She has led national and international projects on gender in textbooks, sex education, women's higher education, homeless women, HIV and women and single women. Her books include Women Contesting Culture (Stree, 2012) Shakespeare and Indian Cinemas (Routledge, 2018) and Asian Interventions in Global Shakespeare (Routledge, 2020). Her book Bengal and Italy: Transcultural Encounters from the Mid-Nineteenth Century to the Early 21st Century is forthcoming from Routledge.

Kaustav Bakshi is Associate Professor, Department of English, Jadavpur University. A Charles Wallace India Trust Fellow, he has worked on Sri Lankan War Literature and sexualities for his doctoral programme. An LGBTIQ+ activist, he has published in several national and international journals, such as, South Asian Review (2012), Postcolonial Text (2015), New Cinemas: Journal of Contemporary Film (2013), South Asian History and Culture (2015, 2017, 2021, & 2022), South Asian Popular Culture (2018), and Cultural Trends (2023) on queer politics, literature and culture. His latest books include, Rituparno Ghosh: Cinema, Gender, Art (Routledge 2015), Queer Studies: Texts, Contexts, Praxis (Orient Blackswan, 2019) and Popular Cinema in Bengal: Star, Genre, Public Cultures (Routledge, 2021).