This paper analyses two stories by Alice Munro to explore how her fiction interrogates the prevailing social imaginary of the fourth age. Drawing on the theory of Gilleard and Higgs, I show how Munro's stories rely on irony and surreal imagery to subvert the logic that engenders and normalises the opposition between the third and fourth ages, and, by extension, the social death of people coping with later-life dementia. Ultimately, I argue that Munro's fiction does not so much reveal the Truth about the fourth age, as expose the reader's complicity in the construction of the prevailing gothic social imaginary.
CITATION STYLE
Goldman, M. (2017). Re-imagining dementia in the fourth age: the ironic fictions of Alice Munro. Sociology of Health and Illness, 39(2), 285–302. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9566.12439
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