The Literary Old Age at the Intersection of Medical Practice and Public Health: A Cross-Disciplinary Reading of Ane Riel’s Clockwork

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

The Literary Old Age at the Intersection of Medical Practice and Public Health : A Cross-Disciplinary Reading of Ane Riel’s Clockwork. / Jensen, Troels Mygind; Lund, Nicklas Freisleben; Jensen, Stine Grønbæk; Berg, Anne Hagen; Petersen, Klaus; Mai, Anne-Marie; Christensen, Kaare; Pedersen, Jacob Krabbe; Søndergaard, Jens; Simonsen, Peter.

In: Journal of Ageing and Longevity, Vol. 3, No. 2, 2023, p. 153-158.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Jensen, TM, Lund, NF, Jensen, SG, Berg, AH, Petersen, K, Mai, A-M, Christensen, K, Pedersen, JK, Søndergaard, J & Simonsen, P 2023, 'The Literary Old Age at the Intersection of Medical Practice and Public Health: A Cross-Disciplinary Reading of Ane Riel’s Clockwork', Journal of Ageing and Longevity, vol. 3, no. 2, pp. 153-158. https://doi.org/10.3390/jal3020012

APA

Jensen, T. M., Lund, N. F., Jensen, S. G., Berg, A. H., Petersen, K., Mai, A-M., Christensen, K., Pedersen, J. K., Søndergaard, J., & Simonsen, P. (2023). The Literary Old Age at the Intersection of Medical Practice and Public Health: A Cross-Disciplinary Reading of Ane Riel’s Clockwork. Journal of Ageing and Longevity, 3(2), 153-158. https://doi.org/10.3390/jal3020012

Vancouver

Jensen TM, Lund NF, Jensen SG, Berg AH, Petersen K, Mai A-M et al. The Literary Old Age at the Intersection of Medical Practice and Public Health: A Cross-Disciplinary Reading of Ane Riel’s Clockwork. Journal of Ageing and Longevity. 2023;3(2):153-158. https://doi.org/10.3390/jal3020012

Author

Jensen, Troels Mygind ; Lund, Nicklas Freisleben ; Jensen, Stine Grønbæk ; Berg, Anne Hagen ; Petersen, Klaus ; Mai, Anne-Marie ; Christensen, Kaare ; Pedersen, Jacob Krabbe ; Søndergaard, Jens ; Simonsen, Peter. / The Literary Old Age at the Intersection of Medical Practice and Public Health : A Cross-Disciplinary Reading of Ane Riel’s Clockwork. In: Journal of Ageing and Longevity. 2023 ; Vol. 3, No. 2. pp. 153-158.

Bibtex

@article{988a70349b064d13a37736cb7e280ae6,
title = "The Literary Old Age at the Intersection of Medical Practice and Public Health: A Cross-Disciplinary Reading of Ane Riel{\textquoteright}s Clockwork",
abstract = "Recent decades have witnessed the coming of age of {\textquoteleft}literary gerontology{\textquoteright}, a discipline situated at the intersection of literary studies and gerontology. A key argument of this research is that literature and literary criticism can highlight the complexities and ambiguities of age, ageing and later life. As such, the discipline insists on the relevance of literature within the field of gerontology. This study explores this claim from an interdisciplinary perspective and presents the key findings of an exploratory collaboration between researchers representing literature studies, anthropology, history, public health and medicine. The members of the research team took part in a joint reading, analysis and discussion of Danish author Ane Riel{\textquoteright}s novel, Clockwork, which depicts an ageing protagonist{\textquoteright}s reconcilement with old age and death. These efforts resulted in dual dimensions of insight: a realistic dimension, which may be interpreted as a confirmation of the existing knowledge of ageing and wellbeing, characterized by physical and cognitive challenges; and an imaginary dimension, a type of knowledge distilled in the interaction between the reader and the literary work. The reader can be seen to be tasked with identifying with the protagonist, with this process providing a hitherto unknown perspective on how ageing is experienced, how it feels and what it means. The study exemplifies an approach fostering cross-disciplinary inspiration, which may stimulate novel research hypotheses and ultimately inform public health thinking and medical practice.",
author = "Jensen, {Troels Mygind} and Lund, {Nicklas Freisleben} and Jensen, {Stine Gr{\o}nb{\ae}k} and Berg, {Anne Hagen} and Klaus Petersen and Anne-Marie Mai and Kaare Christensen and Pedersen, {Jacob Krabbe} and Jens S{\o}ndergaard and Peter Simonsen",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.3390/jal3020012",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "153--158",
journal = "Journal of Ageing and Longevity",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The Literary Old Age at the Intersection of Medical Practice and Public Health

T2 - A Cross-Disciplinary Reading of Ane Riel’s Clockwork

AU - Jensen, Troels Mygind

AU - Lund, Nicklas Freisleben

AU - Jensen, Stine Grønbæk

AU - Berg, Anne Hagen

AU - Petersen, Klaus

AU - Mai, Anne-Marie

AU - Christensen, Kaare

AU - Pedersen, Jacob Krabbe

AU - Søndergaard, Jens

AU - Simonsen, Peter

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Recent decades have witnessed the coming of age of ‘literary gerontology’, a discipline situated at the intersection of literary studies and gerontology. A key argument of this research is that literature and literary criticism can highlight the complexities and ambiguities of age, ageing and later life. As such, the discipline insists on the relevance of literature within the field of gerontology. This study explores this claim from an interdisciplinary perspective and presents the key findings of an exploratory collaboration between researchers representing literature studies, anthropology, history, public health and medicine. The members of the research team took part in a joint reading, analysis and discussion of Danish author Ane Riel’s novel, Clockwork, which depicts an ageing protagonist’s reconcilement with old age and death. These efforts resulted in dual dimensions of insight: a realistic dimension, which may be interpreted as a confirmation of the existing knowledge of ageing and wellbeing, characterized by physical and cognitive challenges; and an imaginary dimension, a type of knowledge distilled in the interaction between the reader and the literary work. The reader can be seen to be tasked with identifying with the protagonist, with this process providing a hitherto unknown perspective on how ageing is experienced, how it feels and what it means. The study exemplifies an approach fostering cross-disciplinary inspiration, which may stimulate novel research hypotheses and ultimately inform public health thinking and medical practice.

AB - Recent decades have witnessed the coming of age of ‘literary gerontology’, a discipline situated at the intersection of literary studies and gerontology. A key argument of this research is that literature and literary criticism can highlight the complexities and ambiguities of age, ageing and later life. As such, the discipline insists on the relevance of literature within the field of gerontology. This study explores this claim from an interdisciplinary perspective and presents the key findings of an exploratory collaboration between researchers representing literature studies, anthropology, history, public health and medicine. The members of the research team took part in a joint reading, analysis and discussion of Danish author Ane Riel’s novel, Clockwork, which depicts an ageing protagonist’s reconcilement with old age and death. These efforts resulted in dual dimensions of insight: a realistic dimension, which may be interpreted as a confirmation of the existing knowledge of ageing and wellbeing, characterized by physical and cognitive challenges; and an imaginary dimension, a type of knowledge distilled in the interaction between the reader and the literary work. The reader can be seen to be tasked with identifying with the protagonist, with this process providing a hitherto unknown perspective on how ageing is experienced, how it feels and what it means. The study exemplifies an approach fostering cross-disciplinary inspiration, which may stimulate novel research hypotheses and ultimately inform public health thinking and medical practice.

U2 - 10.3390/jal3020012

DO - 10.3390/jal3020012

M3 - Journal article

VL - 3

SP - 153

EP - 158

JO - Journal of Ageing and Longevity

JF - Journal of Ageing and Longevity

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 352133714