Aging transcends and intersects all structured social differences as a fluid complex of positionalities: A temporal situatedness in relation to gender, class, race, and sexuality. Age's operation as an organizing principle of power remains undertheorized in feminist philosophy. This article employs a geographical lens to spatialize feminist thought on old age to enrich understanding of factors underpinning expectations and practices of what particular bodies can and should do in particular spaces. Vignettes from twelve months of ethnographic fieldwork with six older individuals in a midwestern American city demonstrate the utility of advancing not just an embodied feminist philosophy of aging, but one that is emplaced to deepen understanding of the body as situated in time and space. A person's situatedness in dynamic place-events, ranging from daily life at home and engagement in supportive social spaces to experiences of discrimination and even inclement weather, produce distinct ways of being old. Investigating intimate geographies of later life from the micro to macro scale can help destabilize and challenge the objectification, control, and Othering of old people, the majority of whom are female. This article contributes greater body a-where-ness to feminist philosophy and stimulates novel investigation into the spatiotemporal situatedness of later life.
CITATION STYLE
Finlay, J. (2021). Intimately Old: From an Embodied to Emplaced Feminist Approach to Aging. Hypatia, 36(1), 80–100. https://doi.org/10.1017/hyp.2020.51
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