Editors’ Introduction
Part I: Soviet Gerontology and Geriatrics
1. The Legend of Gilgamesh: Attempts towards its Fulfilment in Soviet Gerontology Vladislav Bezrukov (Institute of Gerontology, Ukraine) and Konstantin Duplenko (Kiev-Mohyla National University, Ukraine)
2. From the Collections of the Medical Museum: Duality in 1920s Soviet Ageing Research Maria Tutorskaya (Russian Medical Museum, Russia)
3. Ageing Minds and Bodies: Psychiatric Care for the Elderly People in the Post-War Soviet Union Aleksandra Brokman (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
4. ‘Dolphin Babies’: The Late Soviet Project of Infant Swimming and the Creation of ‘a New Superhuman Being Anna Ozhiganova (Russian Academy of Sciences, Russia)Part II: Designing Medical and Social Spaces for Elderly People in the Soviet Union
5. Age and City: Old Age and Urban Planning in Moscow and Kiev Botakoz Kassymbekova (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
6. ‘A Quiet Old Age’: Designing Homes for Elderly People Susan Grant (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)Part III: Representation and Perception
7 The Right to a Personal File: Archiving the Lives of Soviet Pensioners Alissa Klots (University of Pittsburgh, USA) and Maria Romashova (Perm University History Museum, Russia)
8. The New Soviet Babushka: Popular Perceptions of Elderly Women after Stalin Danielle Leavitt-Quist (Harvard University, USA)Part IV: International Contexts
9. Ageing and Gerontology in the UK after 1945 Pat Thane (King’s College London, UK)
10. The Burden of Old Age: The Fate of Elderly People in the Polish People’s Republic Ewelina Szpak (Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland)
11. The Development of Museums of Medicine in Post-Soviet Countries and their Contribution to the History of Medicine Katarzyna Jarosz (International University of Logistics and Transport, Poland)
Epilogue James Chappel (Duke University, USA) and Isaac McKean Scarborough (Liverpool John Moores University, UK)
Index