Cathrine Degnen
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Endings, pasts and futures
Temporal complexities and memory talk
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Chapter Three puts forward a two-fold argument about temporality: firstly, that experiences of time and the significance of time may shift as a person ages; secondly, that temporality becomes important in older age because of the uses it is put to against older people in conjunction with narrative. It argues that both narrativity and temporality in ‘disrupted form’ are used against older people to mark a supposed decline into a lesser form of adult selfhood. Temporality has a further level of significance that is explored in this chapter, namely how it is linked to place and to belonging via ‘memory talk’.

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