This discourse analytic study shows how 10 older women, who exercise regularly or attend the University of the Third Age, adjust to the ageing body in their ;everyday talk' through taking a dualist position. The part of the body which is discursively constructed as ageing becomes objectified through appealing to a wider cultural discourse of ageing as biological decline. This dualist position is embedded within a wider cultural discourse of personal agency. The individual's control of the ageing body is emphasized, the ability to monitor and manage ;ageing body parts' through exerting the ;active mind' and the ;busy body' in activities, or simply focusing on ;looking good'.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1359105307084316 | DOI Listing |
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