Aging by the Book: The Emergence of Midlife in Victorian Britain
Aging by the Book offers an innovative look at the ways in which middle age, which for centuries had been considered the prime of life, was transformed during the Victorian era into a period of decline. Single women were nearing middle age at thirty, and mothers in their forties were expected to become sexless; meanwhile, fortyish men anguished over whether their "time for love had gone by." Looking at well-known novels of the period, as well as advertisements, cartoons, and medical and advice manuals, Kay Heath uncovers how this ideology of decline permeated a changing culture. Aging by the Book unmasks and confronts midlife anxiety by examining its origins, demonstrating that our current negative attitude toward midlife springs from Victorian roots, and arguing that only when we understand the culturally constructed nature of age can we expose its ubiquitous and stealthy influence.
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Aging by the Book: The Emergence of Midlife in Victorian Britain
Aging by the Book offers an innovative look at the ways in which middle age, which for centuries had been considered the prime of life, was transformed during the Victorian era into a period of decline. Single women were nearing middle age at thirty, and mothers in their forties were expected to become sexless; meanwhile, fortyish men anguished over whether their "time for love had gone by." Looking at well-known novels of the period, as well as advertisements, cartoons, and medical and advice manuals, Kay Heath uncovers how this ideology of decline permeated a changing culture. Aging by the Book unmasks and confronts midlife anxiety by examining its origins, demonstrating that our current negative attitude toward midlife springs from Victorian roots, and arguing that only when we understand the culturally constructed nature of age can we expose its ubiquitous and stealthy influence.
26.49 In Stock
Aging by the Book: The Emergence of Midlife in Victorian Britain

Aging by the Book: The Emergence of Midlife in Victorian Britain

by Kay Heath
Aging by the Book: The Emergence of Midlife in Victorian Britain

Aging by the Book: The Emergence of Midlife in Victorian Britain

by Kay Heath

eBook

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Overview

Aging by the Book offers an innovative look at the ways in which middle age, which for centuries had been considered the prime of life, was transformed during the Victorian era into a period of decline. Single women were nearing middle age at thirty, and mothers in their forties were expected to become sexless; meanwhile, fortyish men anguished over whether their "time for love had gone by." Looking at well-known novels of the period, as well as advertisements, cartoons, and medical and advice manuals, Kay Heath uncovers how this ideology of decline permeated a changing culture. Aging by the Book unmasks and confronts midlife anxiety by examining its origins, demonstrating that our current negative attitude toward midlife springs from Victorian roots, and arguing that only when we understand the culturally constructed nature of age can we expose its ubiquitous and stealthy influence.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780791477267
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 02/19/2009
Series: SUNY series, Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 260
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Kay Heath is Associate Professor of English at Virginia State University.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

1. Introduction: The Rise of Midlife in Victorian Britain

2. “No Longer the Man He Was”: Age Anxiety in the Male Midlife Marriage Plot

3. “The Neutral Man-Woman”: Female Desexualization at Midlife

4. Marriageable at Midlife: The Remarrying Widows of Frances Trollope and Anthony Trollope

5. In the Eye of the Beholder: Victorian Age Construction and the Specular Self

6. “How To Keep Young”: Advertising and Late-Victorian Age Anxiety

7. Afterword: The Future of Midlife

Notes
Works Cited
Index
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