ABSTRACT

Debates on policy concerning medical care and social welfare of the elderly become ever more pressing, and many of the assumptions on which they are based are now open to question. This study sets out to provide a historical perspective on the economic, medical, class and gender relations of the elderly, which until now have received relatively little attention. In particular, the position of the elderly is linked to the fundamental issues of health, disability and medical care. With attention currently focused on the setting of the retirement age, community and family care, and pensions, as well as wider debates on the rights of the elderly, this volume aims to supply a historical context for such issues.

chapter |10 pages

Sufferings of the Clergy

Illness and old age in Exeter diocese, 1300–1540

chapter |23 pages

Old Age, Poverty, and Disability in Early Modern Norwich

Work, remarriage, and other expedients

chapter |26 pages

The Medicalization of Old Age

Continuity and change in Germany from the late eighteenth to the early twentieth century

chapter |22 pages

The Welfare of the Elderly in the Past

A family or community responsibility?

chapter |19 pages

Welfare Institutions in Comparative Perspective

The fate of the elderly in contemporary South Asia and pre-industrial Western Europe