Foreword – A personal perspective on psychologies of ageing: Christine Bryden
Chapter 1 - Introduction: Psychologies of Ageing : Michael Murray, Carol Holland and Elizabeth Peel
Part I – Social and Critical Psychology
Chapter 2 - Ageing identities in the twenty first century: Ageing well or ageing badly?: Christine Stephens and Mary Breheny
Chapter 3 – Critical psychology, intersectionality and older adults as sexually agentic: Sharron Hinchliff
Chapter 4 – Empathy as a way of acknowledging patients’ personhood in palliative care interactions: Joe Ford and Charles Antaki
Part II – Cognitive and Biological Psychology
Chapter 5 – Stress and healthy ageing: Anna Phillips
Chapter 6 - Healthy lifestyle to reduce dementia: Eef Hogervorst
Chapter 7 - Neurocognitive intra-individual variability as an early marker of falls, gait impairment and cognitive decline in old age: Sarah Bauermeister, Becky I Haynes, Jack Graveson & David Bunce
Part III - Community and Political Psychology
Chapter 8 - Home and community supports for older people : Judith Sixsmith
Chapter 9 - Community connections and independence in later life: Charles Musselwhite
Chapter 10 – Social representations, narratives and ageing: Molly Andrews and Michael Murray
Elizabeth Peel is Professor in Communication and Social Interaction at Loughborough University, UK. Her most recent books are Ageing and Sexualities (with Rosie Harding) and Critical Kinship Studies (with Damien W. Riggs).
Carol Holland is Professor of Ageing at Lancaster University, UK, and Director of the Centre for Ageing Research. She is a co-ordinator for the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing.
Michael Murray is Professor of Social and Health Psychology at Keele University, UK. He has co-authored Health Psychology (5 editions) and co-edited Critical Health Psychology and Qualitative Health Psychology (with Kerry Chamberlain).
This book brings together a diversity of perspectives on the psychology of ageing. Exploring theoretical, conceptual, empirical and practical viewpoints on the topic, the authors offer insight into a range of contemporary issues. Dedicated chapters discuss themes within social and critical psychology such as ageing identities, sexuality and empathy in palliative care. The second part of the book analyses cognitive and biological aspects of ageing, including stress and health in ageing, dementia and lifestyle, and resilience in frailty in old age. The authors conclude by offering perspectives on community and political psychology, examining home and community supports for older people. Written in an accessible style suitable for students as well as researchers in psychology and the social sciences interested in ageing, this book showcases key theoretical, empirical, and practical issues in later life.