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Book ChapterDOI

Historicizing Late Style as a Discourse of Reception

Linda Hutcheon, +1 more
- pp 51-68
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The article was published on 2016-09-08. It has received 7 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Reception theory & Style (visual arts).

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Journal ArticleDOI

Approaches to old age: perspectives from the twenty-first century

TL;DR: In 2004, Julia Johnson edited a collection of five articles entitled Writing Old Age as mentioned in this paper, which pointed to the emergence of researchers such as Andrew Blaikie, Thomas Cole, Chris...
Journal ArticleDOI

Retirement in Utopia: William Morris's Senescent Socialism

Jacob Jewusiak
- 10 Mar 2019 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that William Morris's work displaces an implicit youthful bias in theories of utopia and socialism by making senescence a structuring principle of his ideal society.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lateness and Lessness

TL;DR: DeLillo and Roth as discussed by the authors have been characterized as a turn to writing novels about lateness in a style that for both authors tends toward “less and less.” Their work manifests a relationship between lateness and style that departs both from canonical accounts of late style and from Theodor W. Adorno's and Edward Said's theories of ironic anachronism.
Journal ArticleDOI

Walt’s Art History: Late Style, Digital Aesthetics and the ‘Disney Baroque’

Christopher Holliday
- 01 Mar 2023 - 
TL;DR: The authors examines the critical and cultural framing of the Walt Disney Studio's cel-and computer-animated feature films according to an enduring art-historical narrative, arguing that the studio has often been understood according to early, middle and late phases of production that are typically held as both complementary and in tension with each other.
Book ChapterDOI

Wise Old Fools

Rolf Parr
TL;DR: In this article , a discussion of positive psychology's emphasis on aging-as-expertise oversimplify and its focus on wisdom as late-life flourishing foreclose that literary studies of aging might reinstall, and how literary aging invites creative forms of ignorance and nonmastery often shelved as negative aging or mere foolishness.