4.1 Article

The fourth age and the concept of a 'social imaginary': A theoretical excursus

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGING STUDIES
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages 368-376

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaging.2013.08.004

Keywords

Castoriadis; Cultural studies; Fourth age; Third age; Social imaginary

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This paper explores the idea of the 'fourth age' as a form of social imaginary. During the latter half of the twentieth century and beyond, the cultural framing of old age and its modern institutionalisation within society began to lose some of its former chronological coherence. The 'pre-modern' distinction made between the status of 'the elder' and the state of 'senility' has re-emerged in the 'late modern' distinction between the 'third' and the 'fourth' age. The centuries-old distaste for and fear of old age as 'senility' has been compounded by the growing medicalization of later life, the emergence and expansion of competing narratives associated with the third age, and the progressive 'densification' of the disabilities within the older institutionalised population. The result can be seen as the emergence of a 'late modern' social imaginary deemed as the fourth age. This paper outlines the theoretical evolution of the concept of a social imaginary and demonstrates its relevance to aging studies and its applicability to the fourth age. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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