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More-Than-Human Aging

About the author

Cristina Douglas is a medical anthropologist and a PhD candidate in social/medical anthropology at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. 

Andrew Whitehouse is a lecturer in anthropology at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. He is a coeditor of Landscapes beyond Land: Routes, Aesthetics, Narratives.

Jay Sokolovsky is a professor emeritus of anthropology at the University of South Florida St. Petersburg. He is the editor of The Cultural Context of Aging, 4th edition, and author of Indigenous Mexico Engages the 21st Century: A Multimedia-Enabled Text.

Susan McHugh is a professor of English at the University of New England in Biddeford, Maine. She is the author of Love in a Time of Slaughters: Human-Animal Stories against Extinction and Genocide and Animal Stories: Narrating across Species Lines.

Cristina Douglas, Andrew Whitehouse (ed.)

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Additional Information

  • Published 2024 (Rutgers Univ. Press)

  • 230 pages

  • ISBN: 9781978840942

  • Paperback

  • Rights: World

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'This innovative anthology is a must-read for anyone related to the aging process. It covers the field from robot companionship to that of animals in literature.'
Animals, Robots, and Care in Later Life

What does later life look like when it is lived in the companionship of other species? Similarly, how do other species age (or not) with humans, and what sort of (a)symmetries, if any, are brought to light around how we understand and think about aging? So far, aging has been investigated in the social sciences in purely human terms. This is the first collection of original work that considers aging as taking place in relation to other species. This volume aims to start a conversation about aging by taking its more-than-human participants seriously—that is, not only as a support for or context of human aging but also, more symmetrically, as agents and subjects in the process of aging.

 

The contributors draw upon richly descriptive ethnographic accounts, including moments of connection between seniors and dogs in a long-term care facility, human care for aging laboratory animals, and robotic companion-ship in later life. The ethno-graphies in this volume not only enrich our understanding of more-than-human companionship during the human aging process but also challenge and urge us to rethink what it means to live later in life in ecologically entangled social and moral worlds.

George E. Dickinson - co-author of Understanding Dying, Death, and Bereavement
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