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"This damnable, disgusting old age"

ageing and (being) one's body

Christopher Hamilton

pp. 305-324

The aim of this chapter is to explore the way in which, in ageing, the body reclaims one. Drawing principally on the work of Jean Améry, I explore this notion, developing it in the context of the mystery of one's relation to one's body: one is one's body, but one has one's body, or so I suggest, and this fractured and puzzling relation we have to ourselves is part of what ageing makes us realize and acknowledge. I further relate ageing to our mortality, and close by exploring it in the context of the ageing of the face, drawing on some reflections on self-portraiture to help clarify the sense in which the ageing body demands a certain redemption which we can seek to respond to or refuse.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/978-1-137-39356-2_18

Full citation:

Hamilton, C. (2016)., "This damnable, disgusting old age": ageing and (being) one's body, in G. Scarre (ed.), The Palgrave handbook of the philosophy of aging, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 305-324.

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