Opening up the debate on the ageing society : preliminary hypotheses for a possible mutational and post-mutationary society / Alejandro Klein.

Author
Klein, Alejandro [Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/​Created
  • Cham, Switzerland : Springer, [2022]
  • ©2022
Description
1 online resource (165 pages)

Details

Subject(s)
Series
Source of description
Description based on print version record.
Contents
  • Intro
  • Prologue
  • Contents
  • Chapter 1: Note About the Methodological and Conceptual Use of This Book
  • Chapter 2: Old Age No Longer Anticipates the Unpostponable Sign of Death: The New Social and Identity Models of Older Adults
  • 2.1 Quantitative Data: The Ageing Society
  • 2.2 Extrapolations to Ageing Society Data
  • 2.3 Qualitative Data: The Profound Social and Identity Experimentation of Older Adults
  • 2.4 Alberto's Case: The Beginning of Subjective Experimentation
  • 2.5 Nelson's Case: Change Is Possible
  • 2.6 Joseph's Case: The Frank Subjective Experimentation
  • 2.7 Analysis of the Life History Fragments of Alberto, Nelson and Joseph
  • 2.8 The Appropriation of the Social Promise and the Future as a Structure for the Constitution of the Subjectivity of the Older Adult
  • 2.9 The Political Power of Older Adults
  • 2.10 The Breakaway Group of Older Adults
  • 2.11 From Emergent Subjectivities to Abrupt Subjectivities
  • 2.12 Conclusion
  • Chapter 3: The New Dialogues of Grandparenthood from the Social Precariousness and Family Bewilderment
  • 3.1 What Is Required of Parental Figures
  • 3.2 Bewildered Parents
  • 3.3 Today's Family Emerging from Unprecedented Social Change
  • 3.4 The (Lost) Meaning of Parenting Today
  • 3.5 The So-Called Demographic Transition
  • 3.6 The Protagonism of the Dialogues of Grandparenthood
  • 3.7 Conclusion
  • Chapter 4: The Older Adult, the Social Bond in Transition and the Depletion of the Transmission Capacity
  • 4.1 Previous Considerations on the Traditional Social Bond
  • 4.2 Social Bond: The Ever-Renewable and Present
  • 4.2.1 The Agony of the Social Bond
  • 4.3 The Profound Resignification of Old People and the Renewal of the Social Bond
  • 4.4 Reconstruction of the Figure of the Ancestor from Grandparenthood.
  • 4.5 The Generational Confrontation of Old People. Exhaustion of the Traditional Transmission of the Social Bond
  • 4.6 The Scenes of Disrepute
  • 4.7 Conclusion
  • Chapter 5: Change to the "Social Order" from the Deconstruction Imposed by the Ageing Society: Social Relations That Become Anachronistic, Social Relations That Are Idealized, Social Relations That Are Denigrated
  • 5.1 Social Relations That Are Decisively Reconfigured
  • 5.2 The Emphasis on the Capacity for Generational-Transgenerational Confrontation
  • 5.3 The Performativity of Generating Change Brought About by Older Adults
  • 5.4 Anachronistic Social Relations: The Impossibility of Transmitting and the Discredit of Inheritance
  • 5.5 The Instituting-Instituted Dimension of the Social Contract
  • 5.6 The Excess of the Machinic Institute
  • 5.7 The Support of a Rebellious Institutionally Active
  • 5.8 Conclusion
  • Chapter 6: Ageism, Disability and Healthy Ageing as Stereotypizing Paradigms
  • 6.1 Ageism: Fear of Ageing? Fear of Old People? Fear of What?
  • 6.2 History, Theory and Criticism
  • 6.3 The Proliferation of Old People and Old Age
  • 6.4 On Helplessness as a Stereotypical Paradigm
  • 6.5 Ageism from the Paradigm of Healthy Ageing
  • 6.6 The Disastrous Experience of Covid-19: Exacerbation and Justification of Ageism
  • 6.7 Understanding the Resurgence of Ageism
  • 6.8 Ageism: A Surprising Force of Influence
  • 6.9 Conclusion
  • Chapter 7: Old People, Coronavirus and the Precarious Culture of Precariousness
  • 7.1 The Principle
  • 7.2 The Coronavirus Discourse as a Renewal of the Hygienist Discourse
  • 7.3 The Precariousness of Precariousness
  • 7.4 The Taxing Temptation of Hard References
  • 7.5 Psychosocial Consequences of the High Subjective, Bonding and Cultural Experience of Older People
  • 7.6 And Suddenly the COVID-19
  • 7.7 The Precarious Precariousness of Today's World.
  • 7.8 Conclusion
  • Chapter 8: Thanatopolitics, Totalitarianism and Coronavirus: A Tour of Excesses
  • 8.1 The Renewed Version of the Black Plague
  • 8.2 Disciplines, Viruses and Health Discourse
  • 8.3 Health Discourse and Viruses Everywhere
  • 8.4 What We Are Talking About When It Comes to totalitarianism. The Obedient-Subject
  • 8.5 Cancerous Logic of the Show
  • 8.6 The Oppressive Power, the Gratifying Power, the Annihilating Power
  • 8.7 Thanatopolitical Precariousness
  • 8.8 How Does All This Continue?
  • 8.9 Conclusion
  • Chapter 9: Insoluble Dilemmas of a Bewildered World
  • 9.1 A Social Model That Is Paradoxically Very Unsocial
  • 9.2 Insolvable Dilemmas? The Exhausted Social Contract
  • 9.3 The Structure of Bewildered Adults
  • 9.4 The Mutational Society
  • 9.5 Subjective Implications of the Mutational Society
  • 9.6 Conclusion
  • Chapter 10: Preliminary Hypotheses for a Probability Called Mutational Society
  • Chapter 11: Unstable Reasons of a Possible Post-Mutational Society
  • Bibliography
  • Index.
ISBN
3-031-11450-7
OCLC
1338839026
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