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Crossing Frontiers W. Andrew Achenbaum (Institute of Gerontology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)

Crossing Frontiers By W. Andrew Achenbaum (Institute of Gerontology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)

Summary

Gerontology did not emerge as a scientific field of inquiry in the United States until the twentieth century. By tracing intellectual networks and analyzing institutional patterns, Crossing Frontiers shows how old age became a 'problem' worth investigating and how a multidisciplinary orientation took shape.

Crossing Frontiers Summary

Crossing Frontiers: Gerontology Emerges as a Science by W. Andrew Achenbaum (Institute of Gerontology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)

Although philosophers, physicians, and others have long pondered the meanings and experiences of growing older, gerontology did not emerge as a scientific field of inquiry in the United States until the twentieth century. The study of aging borrows from a variety of other disciplines, including medicine, psychology, sociology and anthropology, but its own scientific basis is still developing. Despite dozens of aging-related journals, and a notable increase in state, regional, national and international networks, there are no widely shared techniques or distinctive methods. Theories of aging remain partial and tentative. By tracing intellectual networks and analyzing institutional patterns, Crossing Frontiers shows how old age became a 'problem' worth investigating and how a multidisciplinary orientation took shape. Gerontology is a marginal intellectual enterprise but its very strengths and weaknesses illuminate the politics of specialization and academic turf-fighting in U.S. higher education.

Crossing Frontiers Reviews

...[a] perceptive, beautifully written and superbly organized history of American gerontology... London Review of Books
Heavily footnoted, well researched, and scholarly, this book is the first to trace the history of gerentology from its roots in 19th-century physiology to today's highly competitive research centers. Library Journal
Crossing Frontiers is an excellent, thorough, and richly documented history of gerontology. American Journal of Sociology
I recommend Crossing Frontiers as worthwhile reading for anyone interested in gerontology today....any physician interested in the broader issues of aging will benefit from reading this book. David H. Solomon, MD, JAMA
Crossing Fronteirs...presents a cognent history of gerontology as a scientific field; it offers a prescription for the future... Journal of American History

Table of Contents

Introduction; Two Precursors; Keywords; OLD AGE BECOMES A 'PROBLEM' WORTH INVESTIGATING SCIENTIFICALLY; 1. Surveying the Frontiers of Aging; 2. Setting Boundaries for Disciplined Discoveries; 3. Establishing Outposts for Multidisciplinary Research on Aging; GERONTOLOGY TAKES SHAPE IN THE ERA OF BIG SCIENCE; 4. Organizing the Gerontological Society to Promote Interdisciplinary Research Amid Disciplinary and Professional Constriction; 5. Risk-taking in the Modern Research University - The Fate of Multidisciplinary Institutes on Aging; 6. The Federal Government as Sponsor, Producer, and Consumer of Research on Aging; 7. Gerontology in the Service of America's Aging Veterans; Conclusion; The Current State of the Field; Reconstructing Gerontology

Additional information

NLS9780521558808
9780521558808
0521558808
Crossing Frontiers: Gerontology Emerges as a Science by W. Andrew Achenbaum (Institute of Gerontology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
1995-08-25
296
N/A
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