Sarah Milton
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Introduction
Revolutionary intimacies?
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The so-called ‘baby boom’ generation have lived their teenage years, marriages, family making, divorce, and now ageing into and beyond midlife, throughout a time where across North America and Europe there has been rapid change in practices of and policies surrounding intimacy, gender and sexuality – as well as rapid and dramatic changes in the ways in which people age and experience ageing. The Introduction chapter begins by examining a wide body of work on the sociologies of intimacy, family and relationships and ageing studies. Drawing the literature on ageing, gender and relating together, I show how assumptions about the baby boom generation and its revolutionary character are exclusive, deeply classed and racialised. In this book, I draw on ethnographic research in salsa classes across southern England and oral history interviews undertaken between 2011 and 2020 to document the everyday meanings and practices of femininity and heterosexuality, and the doing of ‘new’ intimacies, among women in midlife. The chapter goes on to describe the methodology of the research: an innovative combination of ethnographic fieldwork in salsa classes and life history interviews. The salsa ‘field’ is described and I discuss the value of sensorial methodologies, particularly in research on gender and sexuality, and then further detail the additional layers of depth and context that the life history interviews provided to the ethnographic present. The chapter concludes with a summary of the remaining chapters.

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Ageing and new intimacies

Gender, sexuality and temporality in an English salsa scene

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