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A Long Time Coming

essays on ageing

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2016 NIB: WAVERLEY LIBRARY AWARD FOR LITERATURE

A powerful collection of essays exploring what it means to grow old in our youth-obsessed world

To live a long life should be a joy; to be old should not be a burden.

With improved health care and higher standards of living, each generation is living longer than the last. Governments see our ageing population as an imminent disaster, and old age as a medical problem. We are encouraged to remain active, stay healthy, and work longer — in short, to refuse becoming old. But if living longer is really about staying young, do we risk turning a blind eye to issues facing the elderly?

Weaving interviews with research and memoir, Joosten undertakes a timely and clear-sighted investigation into the housing crisis as it affects older people, the politics of nursing-home care, the difficulties of dementia, support services for Indigenous Australians, and how the burden of caring for others can fall disproportionately on women.

Moving, passionate, and urgent, A Long Time Coming is a call for empathy in a society that valorises youth and self-reliance — a profound reminder that everyone has the right to be old.

PRAISE FOR MELANIE JOOSTEN

'[A] fine collection ... shows deep commitment and quite profound levels of insight and compassion.' The Weekend Australian

'Heartening ... [Joosten has] a novelist's feel for the texture of life.' The Sydney Morning Herald

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    • Books+Publishing

      April 1, 2016
      It can be difficult to admit that we are all products of an ageist society, guilty of stereotyping and discrimination against the elderly, regarding them as a hopeless and expensive burden. A Long Time Coming, the first work of nonfiction from author and social worker Melanie Joosten, comprises a series of thoughtful, compassionate essays on old age. Combining memoir, research and interviews, Joosten sheds light on the crises facing the elderly, and interrogates the ‘invisible turning point where we begin to punish the old for existing rather than respect them’. Each essay examines an aspect of the ageing process and our perceptions of the elderly: the way our youth-obsessed society approaches old age as though it were an illness to be treated by staying active, keeping busy, working longer; the housing difficulties facing older people; nursing homes and the challenge of providing culturally appropriate care for Indigenous people; understanding dementia through literature; and the realities of depression and loneliness. This is a patchy but very readable collection that serves as a timely reminder of the challenges faced by the elderly in our ageist society. Cosima McGrath is the Marketing and Communications Officer at Collins Booksellers

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  • English

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