
Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Old-Age Societies—Old-Age Style
- 1 Old-Age Style and Self-Monumentalization in Günter Grass
- 2 Old-Age Style and Self-Healing in Ruth Klüger and Christa Wolf
- 3 Old-Age Style and Self-Transcendence in Martin Walser
- Conclusion: Old-Age Style as Late Style?
- Bibliography
- Index
Conclusion: Old-Age Style as Late Style?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Old-Age Societies—Old-Age Style
- 1 Old-Age Style and Self-Monumentalization in Günter Grass
- 2 Old-Age Style and Self-Healing in Ruth Klüger and Christa Wolf
- 3 Old-Age Style and Self-Transcendence in Martin Walser
- Conclusion: Old-Age Style as Late Style?
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Ich glaube an das Alter, lieber Freund, Arbeiten und Altwerden, das ist es, was das Leben von uns erwartet. Und dann eines Tages alt sein und nicht lange nicht alles verstehen, nein, aber anfangen, aber lieben, aber ahnen, aber zusammenhängen mit Fernem und Unsagbarem, bis in die Sterne hinein.
[I believe in old age, dear friend. To work and to grow old, that's what life expects of us. And then one day to be old and not yet understand everything, not by a long way, but to begin, to love, to speculate, but to be connected with that which lies beyond and cannot be uttered, up until the stars.]
—Rainer Maria Rilke,In the 2011 British movieThe Best Exotic Marigold Hotel (dir. John Madden), an assortment of variously cantankerous, lecherous, and melancholic older Britons flee the prejudices and—perhaps worse—indifference towards the elderly of their home country for india. Here they will spend their autumn years as the retired inhabitants of a colonial-era residence that turns out to be as decrepit as they are. “Everything will be alright in the end and if it's not alright then it's not the end,” insists the ever optimistic, and radiantly youthful, hotel manager sonny. Thus an exuberant Indian faith in future success clashes comically with the British guests' morose awareness of their own decline and their country's fading glory. At the end of the film there is a resolution of sorts. One character has died, but not before reconciling himself with his homosexuality and the Indian lover he had forsaken forty years previously. A second returns home because she is unable to maintain the charade that is her marriage. And all the others have adapted to their new environment, the bustling, chaotic but, above all, emergent world power that is modern India. For instance, Dame Judi Dench’s character gets a job in a call center, teaching young Indians how to speak to their elderly customers back in the United Kingdom, and Bill Nighy’s gets a second chance at love in later years.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Aging and Old-Age Style in Günter Grass, Ruth Klüger, Christa Wolf, and Martin WalserThe Mannerism of a Late Period, pp. 192 - 218Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013