Introduction
The development of social gerontology has led to the emergence of its own terminology and conceptual armoury. Alongside terms such as ‘disengagement’, ‘structured dependency’ and ‘successful ageing’, ‘ageism’ has been a key tool in articulating the mission of gerontology. Introduced by Robert Butler in 1969, ageism was intended to act as an equivalent to the concepts of racism and sexism that were being articulated by the emerging social movements of the time (Palmore and Manton, Reference Palmore and Manton1973). Ageism has since established itself as a lodestone for thinking about the social categorisation of older people and the reasons for their de-valued and residualised status in contemporary society. Many commentators have identified agedness as a source of discrimination, as when an often arbitrarily designated chronological age is used to treat older people as ‘figures of fun and ridicule’ (Neuberger, Reference Neuburger, Cann and Dean2009: 106). Alongside what Butler considered the low value accorded to old age and the negative stereotyping of older people, he also identified discriminatory institutional processes as a component part of ageism that further worsened the position of older people (Butler, Reference Butler1969). How ageism functions and what fundamentally underpins it continues to be a topic of ongoing debate within the field of social gerontology (Coupland and Coupland, Reference Coupland and Coupland1993; Greenberg et al., Reference Greenberg, Schimel, Martens and Nelson2002; Bytheway, Reference Bytheway2005; Snellman, Reference Snellman2016).
Within these discussions, some have made a much stronger argument to the effect that ‘ageism’ operates as an overarching ideology that serves to devalue older people and which in large part explains their economic, social and cultural marginality in society (Bytheway, Reference Bytheway1994). Others such as Macnicol have been somewhat less categorical, seeing ageism as a multifaceted phenomenon which can certainly lead to negative discrimination but which also justifies the existence of various age-related benefits and mandatory retirement pensions (Macnicol, Reference Macnicol2006, Reference Macnicol2015). Behind this latter position lies less of an interest in the processes of ageism than a concern to use the term as a legal weapon in challenging unfair acts of discrimination towards older people. Yet another group is mainly concerned with how negative stereotypes of old age can both stigmatise and discriminate against older people in ways that can be overcome if the issue is addressed by challenging these ageist assumptions (Chiu et al., Reference Chiu, Chan, Snape and Redman2001; Levy, Reference Levy2001). Despite the many different articulations of what is meant by the term ‘ageism’, the term itself, or variants such as ‘ageist discourse’ or ‘ageist ideology’, are often used in combination, becoming in effect equivalent and interchangeable concepts. Part of the reason for this lack of clarity in definitions and overlap in explanatory function is the desire to make ageism a source of oppression equal to other acknowledged oppressions – complete with its own history of contestation and struggle (Ray et al., Reference Ray, Cole, Nikander, Marshall, Higgs and Andrews2009; Gullette, Reference Gullette2017a). For such a strategy to work effectively the more ageism can be identified as an ideology, the greater its general explanatory value would seem to be. In this stronger formulation, ageism may emerge as a product of attitudes or prejudice, but can also be combined into representing one aspect of an inherently discriminatory society or culture. Such structural discrimination links disadvantageous employment practices and social policies to the oppressions of institutional abuse, the ‘segregation’ of old people as well as the negative stereotyping of old age. Margaret Gullette, who has been very influential in setting an agenda on ageism through her book Agewise (Gullette, Reference Gullette2011) has in her more recent work gone so far as to identify ageism as ‘trauma’ threatening older people ‘with palpable violence’ (Gullette, Reference Gullette2017a: 14). Consequently, while quite a few other writers might hesitate to engage with the totality of uses to which ageism as an ideology has been put, most would recognise that making links between the individual and the societal facilitates both social critique and political engagement.
In this paper, we want to challenge the ubiquity of ‘ageism’ as a catch-all concept capable of explaining the discrimination faced by older people. Instead, we wish to advance the argument that the corporeality of the ageing body is underplayed in the reconfiguration of agedness as an ‘ideological’ trope. In a number of works we have posited a more culturally reflexive approach to contemporary ageing; one which we think affords more insight into the dialectic of age (Gadow, Reference Gadow1983) than does a reliance on the idea of ageism as ideology (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2010; Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2015). In particular, we argue that later life has become framed through two very different but closely interconnected concepts, namely those of the third age and fourth age. Put at the centre of analysis, this bifurcation between an ‘aspirational’ and a ‘feared’ later life avoids some of the more obvious contradictions that have beset the ‘ageism as ideology’ approach, as noted for example by Longino (Reference Longino2005). Central to this reformulation is the separation of the socio-structural circumstances of later life from the cultural. This allows us to explain both the advances that have been made in the material improvement in older people's lives, as well as the devaluation of agedness that can be identified in much contemporary culture. Shifting the focus from ageism as a generalising structure to one concentrating on the interplay between the cultures of a third age and the social imaginary of a fourth, however, does not obviate concerns about experiences of ‘unequal ageing’. The impact of health inequalities and poverty still retains importance, but in this new perspective these phenomena can be studied as features of a more widely distributed set of social inequalities, realised at different times and in different ways across the whole of the lifecourse (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2016).
Critiques of social processes employing ageism as a lens have generally incorporated simple age-based distributional inequalities with concerns regarding the civic exclusion and cultural devaluation of older persons. Indeed, the European Union (EU) Horizon 2020 programme has organised a number of initiatives specifically on the topic of ageism, including the ‘EuroAgeism’ international training network which identifies as its prime concern the ‘high prevalence of ageism; the complex and often negative construction of old age’ within Europe (https://cordis.europa.eu/project/rcn/211870_en.html). A similar EU initiative, the ‘COST Action on Ageism’ also identifies the high prevalence of ageism and the ‘unequivocal evidence concerning the negative consequences associated with ageism at the individual, familial, and societal levels’ (http://www.cost.eu/COST_Actions/isch/IS1402). These concerns encompass an ever-widening range of phenomena, from restricted access to specific health resources to various forms of gendered age-based exclusion within contemporary culture and society.
Ageism research has also become more focused on the body and its representation. One contributor to the book Unequal Ageing commented: ‘The fading body is derided, mocked in an attempt to distance the unacceptable truth of ageing’ (Appleyard, Reference Appleyard, Cann and Dean2009: 126). This turn towards the body has had the effect of re-orientating studies of ageism towards concerns over stereotypes and the internalisation of psycho-social representations (Wilkinson and Ferraro, Reference Wilkinson, Ferraro and Nelson2002) with less concern as to how, as Pickard (Reference Pickard2016) describes it, the ‘age system’ works. Again, while many writers using the concept of ageism might not evince such a totalising view of the concept, it is also the case that they rarely criticise its extension to wider aspects of the lives of older people. In her most recent book, Ending Ageism, or How Not to Shoot Old People, Gullette focuses on the way that bodily ageing is not only subject to ‘age shaming’ but is itself a product of a ‘decline ideology’ (Reference Gullette2017a: 192) which calls for a political response, articulated in her much publicised ‘declaration of grievances’ (Reference Gullette2017a: 205–206). While it might be regarded as unrepresentative to single out the work of one author, we would argue that from a variety of positions a consensus has built up around the idea that ageism constitutes an oppressive ideology pervading contemporary society. Even if this recognition is not fully elaborated or even rendered theoretically consistent, it has captured the imagination of many of those working in the field of social gerontology and ageing studies as well as those promoting policies for an ‘ageing society’. While there are undoubted variations in how aspects of ageism can be understood, we would argue that this broader cultural formulation of ageism is fast becoming Kuhnian ‘normal science’ in social gerontology (Kuhn, Reference Kuhn1970).
Our concern is to outline the limitations of the ‘ageism as ideology’ argument. In challenging the idea of ageism as a coherent way of linking institutional and individual concerns around later life, we do not deny that the term may still be useful. It is undoubtedly true that older people can still suffer discrimination, have their interests ignored, and can be demeaned and scapegoated as well as subjected to ridicule. All of this, we agree, should be pointed out and challenged by gerontologists (Cann and Dean, Reference Cann and Dean2009). Our concern, however, is that this pragmatic use of ageism as prejudice has too easily given way to a more reified framework that risks becoming too totalising and thereby rendered less valuable for researchers exploring the impact of such attitudes and practices in the context of social gerontology and ageing studies.
Ageism and ideology
We do not intend to provide a review of all the literature on ‘ageism’. This has been done already, in differing ways, and through a number of contributions, such as those by Bill Bytheway (Reference Bytheway1994, Reference Bytheway2005), Glenda Laws (Reference Laws1995), Erdman Palmore (Reference Palmore1999) and Todd Nelson (Reference Nelson2002). Rather, as stated earlier, we wish to outline the way in which accounts of ageism have come close to identifying it as a pervasive ideology saturating society (Walker, Reference Walker2012). While some authors might resist having their work classified this way, we would argue that the polysemous quality of Butler's term has created such an ‘ideology effect’. With this in mind, we argue that the difficulties surrounding this ‘strong’ version of ageism have led to the over-extension of the term to the detriment of a critical understanding of the complexities of later life in contemporary society.
Ageism
As is well known, Robert Butler not only coined the term ageism, but continued to be actively involved in discussions of it until the end of his life, in 2010 (Achenbaum, Reference Achenbaum2013). His 1969 paper outlined the discrimination that older Americans experienced in the post-war period, in terms of housing and wealth as well as in the form of institutionalised mandatory retirement. He saw the low level of funding then allocated for research into the health problems of older people as equally symptomatic. Significantly, he also pointed to the cultural construction of older people as both excluded and made ‘other’ to ordinary people, a process that he argued led to their further marginalisation (Butler, Reference Butler1969). In an editorial published in 2009, he wrote ‘that age discrimination exists advertently and inadvertently in personal and institutional form, and that economic and psychological factors play a major part in ageism as well’ (Butler, Reference Butler2009: 211).
Bytheway (Reference Bytheway2005) has made the point that there are two ‘not wholly compatible’ approaches to defining ageism. One concerns the beliefs held by people of all ages about the negative impact of biological ageing which relates to the fear of such ageing that develops throughout the lifecourse. The other is that exemplified by Robert Butler, which is summarised in the following way:
Ageism is discrimination against older people on grounds of age. Just as women are disadvantaged and oppressed as a result of sexism, just as black people and other minorities are oppressed by racism, so older people suffer from discrimination as a result of ageism. (Bytheway, Reference Bytheway2005: 361)
Continuing this theme, Bytheway argues that ageism is ‘rooted in the social identity of the individual, both a bureaucratically managed identity and an identity conveyed by the physical appearance of the body’ (Bytheway, Reference Bytheway2005: 362, italics in original). Paradoxically, this identity is most focused on the revelation of chronological age in both institutional as well as private arenas. A decade earlier, Glenda Laws had positioned ageism as an oppressive set of practices and saw the ageism surrounding the body as a ‘surface of inscription’, concluding that ‘ageism is an embodied form of oppression’ (Laws, Reference Laws1995: 114). While there may be a number of sites in which ageism is contested, such as in employment, in the household and within the state, taken together, Laws (Reference Laws1995: 114) argued, they ‘provide a tapestry on which ageist practices are woven’. Taking her cue from feminist and post-modern thought, Laws (Reference Laws1995: 118) resisted adopting an ‘essentialist’ position and identifying a single cause of ageism, arguing that ‘it is important to begin at the sites at which ageism occurs and in which the aged body is created’.
Why should age become a source of oppression? One argument has been because of the costs borne by the welfare state in terms of pensions, health care and social services (Oran, Reference Oran and Bhattacharya2017). Part of the argument concerning the ‘structured dependency’ of old age advanced by writers such as Peter Townsend (Reference Townsend1981) was based on this very argument, as well as drawing on the implications of the ‘fiscal crisis of the state’ in shaping the political economy of ageing (Estes, Reference Estes1986). This model has recently been updated to include the re-articulation of retirement under the politics of neo-liberalism (Macnicol, Reference Macnicol2015). However, if retirement was once the ‘tragedy’ of ‘forced exclusion’ from work, extending working life and forcing up retirement age are now the marks of discrimination. Faced with this shift of gears, it is unsurprising that the research agenda investigating ageism has turned away from the structural position of age and work towards concerns for the social psychological and embodied aspects of ageing as the explanatory site for ageism.
Within this wider cultural framework, some researchers have identified ageism as a prejudice against our feared future selves (Nelson, Reference Nelson2005). North and Fiske have argued that ageism is a trans-national phenomenon whose roots are to be found in cohort competition for status and jobs, which is manifested in negative assessments of physical markers of agedness, such as grey hair and wrinkles (North and Fiske, Reference North and Fiske2012, Reference North and Fiske2013). As noted earlier, a more strongly culturalist reading is that provided by Margaret Gullette (Reference Gullette2017a) who argues that ageist ideology is pervasive in all cultural forms and social encounters. It is, moreover, profoundly oppressive leading to both shame and trauma for older people based around the projected fear of old age. Decline ideologies are so pervasive, she argues, that the term ageing itself should be dropped from the lexicon of terms used to describe old age and the term ageism used in its stead (Gullette, Reference Gullette2017b). Ageism, like the oppressions of gender, sexuality and race, is thought to be a source of both social injustice, personal grief and psychic damage, and like sexism and racism demands a politics of identity and redress. Lynne Segal (Reference Segal2013) amplifies this theme by arguing that ageism implies the dependency and redundancy of older women who are seen as unable to create a positive experience of old age because of their subjection to the dominant tropes of a gendered ageism.
While we share this concern for the negative codes of ugliness and abjection through which the ageing body is often viewed (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2011b, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2013), we do not see these negative stereotypes as created by ideologically shaped ageist discourses. Instead, we contend that they reflect existential and ontological concerns about ageing and decline which long pre-date any modernist or neo-liberal agenda. While such concerns can be employed to promote particular agendas by both state and market actors – as in the biopolitics of ageing or the market for anti-ageing products and services – they are not constituted as such. This historical distinction goes to the root of the differences between accounts of ageism as ideology and those centring on the role of the social imaginary of the fourth age.
Ideology
In treating ageism as ideology, even in a casual fashion, the status of what constitutes an ideology necessarily comes into play. Over the past half century, this question has received considerable attention particularly from writers within the Marxist tradition (Larrain, Reference Larrain1979; Žižek, Reference Žižek and Žižek1994; Therborn, Reference Therborn1999; Rehmann, Reference Rehmann2013; Eagleton, Reference Eagleton2014; Morris, Reference Morris2016). Most point to its modernist and pejorative meaning as a way of accounting for dominant ideas that maintain political and social power. While the idea of ideology has acquired a rather more neutral meaning in recent years, it retains its inference of hiding or masking reality and projecting untruths. For many decades, an orthodoxy reigned of a ‘base–superstructure’ model of the relationship between the economy and ideas about social relations. Over time, and under the influence of different intellectual currents, the concept began to be seen as a determining social structure in its own right (Abercrombie, Reference Abercrombie1980). Perceived as a relatively autonomous discourse, it was, in Louis Althusser's famous caveat, ‘only in the last instance’ determined by the economy (Althusser, Reference Althusser1977: 113). Promoting this prioritising of ideology as discourse led to the decline of an overtly Marxist approach, with many feeling they were better served by adopting a more Foucauldian approach to politics where power was more polyvalent in its dispersion of influence and ideas (Elliott, Reference Elliott1986) while others attempted to combine what they saw as best in Marxist and Foucauldian approaches (Bidet, Reference Bidet2016).
In the absence of an accepted notion of ideology, it is interesting how the idea of ageism as a dominant ideology is considered to work. Salter and Salter (Reference Salter and Salter2018) have talked about a hegemonic ideology of ageing in their work on the political challenges posed by the emergence of the third age as it relates to contemporary social policy. They explicitly see the issues surrounding ‘active ageing’ through the prism of the Italian Marxist, Antonio Gramsci. This is an explicit utilisation of concepts from the Marxist canon rather than their use as a rhetorical device; a way of presenting a ‘radical’ critique that echoes the imagery of Marxist thought without explaining in any analytical detail its connection to social structures. The desire for ageism to carry such a critical content may be one reason why some have adopted the term ‘ageist discourse’ instead of ‘ageist ideology’ (Coupland and Coupland, Reference Coupland and Coupland1993). Influenced by the ‘cultural turn’ brought on by post-structuralism, the ability to describe ageism as a dominant discourse allows for a focus on attitudes towards ageing as well as on the use of age discriminatory terminology (McVittie et al., Reference McVittie, McKinlay and Widdicombe2003). It also permits ageist discourses to be viewed as negative in their consequences while overlooking or ignoring any seemingly positive formulations such as ‘ageing well’ (Angus and Reeve, Reference Angus and Reeve2006). Treating ageism as an ideological discourse also offers some opportunities for the production of counter-discourses such as those presented in Coupland and Williams’ (Reference Coupland and Williams2002) accounts of the different discourses surrounding women's experience of the menopause. However, as van Dijk's overview of ‘critical discourse analysis’ contends, it is also always important to identify the oppressive and discriminatory factors operating within specific discourses which are ‘promoted by elites and their discourses … and their discursive management of the public mind’ (van Dijk, Reference van Dijk1993: 280). However, without such identification of the causal mechanisms, it is difficult to establish why such discourses exist in the first place, who benefits from them and what structures of power maintain them.
Ageing and the social imaginary of the fourth age
We have posited an alternative basis for understanding some of the issues usually subsumed under the mantle of ageism, utilising the notion of a ‘social imaginary’ (Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2016). The social imaginary of the fourth age operates very differently from the cultural field(s) of the third age, which can be understood as originating within the social changes of the late 20th century and its cultural focus on choice, autonomy, self-expression and pleasure (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard, Higgs, Carr and Komp2011a; Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2014). At first sight, this might seem similar to the accounts provided by Gullette and Segal who also point to this consumerist aspect of ageism. These writers, however, provide little explanation of it other than seeing it as intrinsically connected to, and intersecting with, other forms of oppression. We would contend that much of the active ‘othering’ of old age in contemporary culture is closely connected to the growth of consumer markets, lifestyle differentiation and the valorisation of choice inherent in the cultures of the third age. The putative ‘dark side’ of old age, represented antithetically as a fourth age, serves as an amplifier of those cultures, not their product (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2010; Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2014). The fourth age is not, however, a residual category of the third age – later life deprived of its cultural or symbolic capital (Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2014). It draws upon deeper traditions. The negative dimensions of old age and their capacity to serve as a social imaginary, a term adapted from the work of Cornelius Castoriadis (Reference Castoriadis1987), have their origins in what he called the socio-historical ‘magma’ of society, magma that lie deep beneath the surface of modernity and modernisation.
In addressing this imaginary and its connection to the concept of ageism, two points need to be made. The first is that many of the key corporeal processes of ageing are perceived as making the human body appear less attractive, lacking both health and desirability. The more individuals are subject to the processes of corporeal ageing, the more unattractive and unhealthy their body appears – reflecting what Lowenthal (Reference Lowenthal1985: 129) has termed the ‘almost universal’ aversion to ‘the look of age’. While acknowledging that these processes are also gendered and racialised, we also accept that not all bodies become less attractive or less healthy with age. Indeed, while it might be that some people acquire attractive corporeal attributes with age, such exceptional cases do not in themselves furnish convincing evidence to disprove the more general argument. Ideas of attractiveness and healthiness vary across time and place, and while the salience of such ideas may be qualified by other considerations, any particular set of vital human referents is generally made problematic by considerations of their agedness. It is old age's ontological association with a decline towards death that cuts across any simple construction of an ‘ideological’ basis for ageism. This is much more now, as death becomes ever-more confined to the state of agedness (Walter, Reference Walter2017).
Truth, reality and the ‘imaginary’
Implicit in all uses of the term ‘imaginary’ is a contrast with what is not imaginary; what might be thought to be real. In the Marxist tradition, as we have seen, this distinction is structural: between the imaginary (ideological) representations of social relations and the actual lived relationships of power and exploitation (Marx and Engels, Reference Marx and Engels1974). Others, such as Althusser, made a distinction between ‘scientific’ theoretical practice and the ideologically contaminated practices of everyday life (Althusser, Reference Althusser1990). Rejecting any epistemological foundation for ideology, Althusser claimed that ideology is better formulated as a set of representations, which are distinguished from science whose ‘practico-social function is more important than the theoretical function (function as knowledge)’ (Althusser, Reference Althusser1977: 231). This approach has been extensively criticised, Glucksmann (Reference Glucksmann1972) famously arguing that the effect of Althusser's formulation was to create a ‘ventriloquist structuralism’ where all the processes of society occur ‘behind peoples’ backs’. Ted Benton also took Althusser to task for outdoing Talcott Parsons in relation to functionalism, claiming that if Parsons's actors are cultural dopes, Althusser's agents are ‘structural dopes of an even more stunning mediocrity’ (Benton, Reference Benton1984: 222).
The abandonment of a realist epistemological dimension to ideology has had profound effects on the utility of the concept (Morris, Reference Morris2016), opening the door to more discursive approaches. As we have seen, the influence of Michel Foucault has done much to provide an entry point encouraging a more fluid concept of ‘truth’ as practice (Anderson, Reference Anderson1983). Within these alternative conceptions based upon the interplay between various forms of power and knowledge, there is not the same need for ‘ideologies’ to demonstrate some connection to a contrasting ‘underlying reality’ determining their shape and forms. The eclipse of the more traditional Marxist view of ideology as well as the difficulty of finding an adequate base for ageism to emerge as an ideology provide possibilities for the exploration of imaginaries as a way of understanding what has been described as ageism without thereby implying a contrasting ‘real’ ageing.
For writers such as Benedict Anderson (Reference Anderson1988) and Charles Taylor (Reference Taylor2004), the power of the social imaginary is realised through society as a necessary function. Once society expands, beyond the directly knowable bounds of small, face-to-face interactions, it becomes important to ensure common understandings and a degree of abstract predictability of social relations and trust based on common citizenship rather than shared acquaintance. Social representations serve as a common currency, transmitting shared understandings, not because of any attempt to hide the power of elites but simply to sustain the social within an ever-expanding commons. Within such expanding spaces, of course, comes greater ambiguity. As societies and the institutions of community and communication change and grow more complex, the space but not the coherence of the imaginary expands, leaving open a multiplicity of meanings and points of reference in representing social life, whose historical origins may easily be lost or impossible to root.
Imagining and othering old age
Within western culture, old age has often been represented as another country, a ‘foreign’ country that remains ‘other’ to most members of society (Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2014). Developing this theme it could be argued that the ‘otherness’ surrounding old age relates not just to its corporeal otherness: the physical differences between old and young bodies, but also to the chronological otherness of old age, its distance ‘in time’ from the concerns of those who embody the now, the present. This idea was well expressed by the poet May Sarton when she wrote: ‘The trouble is, old age is not interesting until one gets there, a foreign country with an unknown language to the young and even to the middle-aged’ (Sarton, Reference Sarton1982: 23). A similar sentiment regarding the distance between old age and youth occurs in the opening paragraph of L.P. Hartley's novel The Go-Between: ‘The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there’ (Hartley, Reference Hartley1961: 1). While the former writer stresses the otherness of being old, the latter emphasises the otherness of agedness itself, the strangeness of old age mixed with the old as strangers. These quotes illustrate one of the key features of the imaginary, its separation from day-to-day, face-to-face experience – in short, its fashioning of otherness. A number of other authors have explored the historical roots of this trope of ‘otherness’ applied to old age (Lowenthal, Reference Lowenthal1985; Minois, Reference Minois1989; Thane, Reference Thane and Thane2005), while still others have applied insights from post-colonial perspectives to better theorise the various ‘othernesses’ operative in social representations of old age (van Dyk, Reference van Dyk2016). What such approaches make clear is that old age is represented more often as an attribute of others than as a conscious identity of the self.Footnote 1
In the context of the transformation of later life and the creation of possible post-working life lifestyles, there has been a focus on ‘ageless ageing’, seeking as it were to draw away from the association of chronological age with infirmity and decline (Andrews, Reference Andrews1999; Dychtwald, Reference Dychtwald2005). This has had the consequence of throwing into sharp relief a differently residualised old age, framed as ‘real’ old age, which constitutes part of the social imaginary of the fourth age. Unlike the putative product of ageism, this imaginary is not so much a category or status as a state of being, one that is framed by frailty, abjection and the need for care amidst the indignities of old age (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2010; Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2016). In Sarton's terms, ‘real’ old age is something that one falls into, rather than simply another stage of life one is travelling through (Sarton, Reference Sarton1996: 15). This discursive ‘othering’ plays a key role in situating the social imaginary of the fourth age, drawing upon already existing assumptions about the nature of ‘real’ old age and serving to amplify its fearfulness. It may be that these assumptions share the ‘decline ideology’ as articulated by Gullette and her desire to remove ageing from the gerontological lexicon (Gullette, Reference Gullette2017b), but to see the corporeality of old age as little more than an imagined product of culture implies a degree of social constructionism that many would find difficult to accept.
The interconnectedness of ageing, vulnerability and frailty is fundamental to the process of othering old age. Frailty has become one of the boundary issues articulating the fourth age imaginary (Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2015). Not only have these issues become central to the ‘densification’ of old age, but as Degnen (Reference Degnen2007) points out, the experiences of corporeal morbidity that demarcate an ‘us’ from a ‘them’ serve as ‘the truth’ of this distinction, more than does the representation of chronological age. Within the discourses of bio-medicine, as well as those of health and social care, frailty functions as a way of alerting concerned institutions to the collapse of agency and the demise of the autonomous identity of the older individual (Gilleard and Higgs, Reference Gilleard and Higgs2010; Tomkow, Reference Tomkow2020). When dementia is added, a further deepening of the social imaginary occurs which some have described as the ‘social death’ of the subject (Sweeting and Gilhooly, Reference Sweeting and Gilhooly1997). In addition to the dependency implied by frailty, the serious cognitive impairments constituting the various dementias limit the individual and the forms of agency and identity that can be expressed through choice, autonomy, self-expression and pleasure. Social responses to the condition often amplify this appearance of ‘ageing without agency’, replacing first-person narratives with those of the third person (Higgs and Gilleard, Reference Higgs and Gilleard2017). Developing this approach further, it can be argued that such ‘othering’ of old age is not the same as the ideological othering of an abject or precarious class, nor is it the exercise of a ruling classes’ dispossession of its dominated inferiors such as contended by Georges Bataille in his original formulation of abjection and the abject classes (Bataille, Reference Bataille and Lotringer1999). Rather, it is the othering of a totalising risk, as severe as it is ill specified, that leaves no fixed position from which to offer opposition (or indeed to frame effective counter-imaginaries) – in effect to posit an opposing collective reality. If, as the literary critic, William Iser has suggested, the imaginary is realised always and only as a ‘relation’ or ‘oscillation’ between a set of triggers and their activation (Iser, Reference Iser1993: 223), the suppression of any imaginary cannot simply be willed, nor can an alternative imaginary be ‘induced’ without denying or ignoring the salience of agedness. This has the effect of realising precisely what the cultures of the third age want to achieve.
Ideology or social imaginary: a concluding comment
This paper's principal argument is that the changes that have transformed later life, and which have crystallised in the 21st century, need to be recognised in the conceptual tools that gerontologists use. In particular, the idea of ageism as an ideology which discriminates and oppresses is one that, while providing a radical gloss to arguments for social change, does not adequately address the much more nuanced issues of ageing and old age in contemporary society. Resolving the Janus-faced predicament of wanting to live long, yet not wanting to grow old, cannot simply be reduced to combating the operation of a discriminatory ideology or discourse – nor even by attacking popular prejudices common in different circumstances. Taking the arguments of the fourth age further, we would contend that the imaginary is not willed into existence, and equally it cannot be willed out of existence. It possesses features that relate to the existential and ontological dimensions of human corporeality and its physical limitations. Instead, we argue, it is better to acknowledge and explore the contexts and contradictions that are presented by ageing, that exist both at an individual and at a socio-cultural level. Attempts to trace out their effects as well as to identify where their triggers can most readily be militated should not to be abandoned. Ageism as a concept can still have its uses, serving to identify examples of discrimination or exclusion in cultural participation: in the delivery of health, in employment practices, as well as in the delivery of goods and services. This aspect of ageism may be active in restricting the opportunities for individuals as they age and come close to retirement; in a sense it is this resistance to being aged that defines the cultures of the third age. But it also has to be accepted that retirement and the provisions of pensions can be seen as a positive form of ageism. How the different aspects of ageism are balanced is always going to be conditional and likely to be unresponsive to any global judgements of categorical completeness.
The idea of an overarching ideology of ageism has much less purchase as an analysis, or as the focus of critique, let alone as a framework to direct or sustain the social sciences and social policy. Holding on to it as a key concept orienting policy, practice or theory will not help us understand the challenges posed by contemporary later life, nor can it serve to underpin local or global policy initiatives designed to address the societal implications of ageing. Not that we would suggest that the concept of a fourth age social imaginary will serve instead to fulfil this expansive role. Our point is that this latter term makes more analytical sense in addressing the dilemmas facing society. By acknowledging the multiplicity of meanings that ‘old age’ presents, across the spaces where the state, markets and culture operate, as well as accepting the capacity for age itself to be alienating and oppressive, we are better able to explore its inherent ambiguities and limitations.
Acknowledgements
Paul Higgs would like to acknowledge the support of the University College London Hospital National Institute of Health Research Biomedical Research Centre.