This collection examines representations of Spanish queer aging through investigations of literary and cinematic representations of this demographic, offering a showcase for research on communities often made invisible due to age and sexual identity in Spanish culture with wider implications for queer aging studies research.
The volume builds on theoretical foundations established by queer aging studies scholars and the ways in which queer aging differs from heterosexual aging, examining negative topics that arise in literature and film (such as the AIDS crisis, the silencing of queer aging individuals, and social stigmas against this group), in addition to positive topics (like the creation of communities and spaces for queer aging characters). Chapters are structured in conversation with one another about key themes in depictions of queer aging in Spanish culture. Several chapters examine such topics as the aging body, stereotypes and discrimination, old age tropes, and queer invisibility, while others highlight positive representations in exploring the importance of the connection to home, family, and community spaces for queer communities. The collection represents a critical step in future work on queer aging to take future research beyond the Spanish context to extend to new geographic and disciplinary borders.
This book will be of interest to scholars in aging studies, gerontology studies, queer theory, health humanities, and Spanish literature and culture.
This collection examines representations of Spanish queer aging through investigations of literary and cinematic representations of this demographic, offering a showcase for research on communities often made invisible due to age and sexual identity in Spanish culture with wider implications for queer aging studies research.
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Heather Jerónimo and Raquel Medina
Chapter 1: Reinscribing the Older Lesbian Subject on the Periphery: Age,
Disability, and Abjection in Salir del ropero (2019)
Ruth Z. Yuste-Alonso
Chapter 2: The Tribes Power: Older Lesbians and New Beginnings in Elogio del
Happy End (2012) by Isabel Franc
Garbińe Vidal-Torreira
Chapter 3: Drawn from Memory: Queer Aging and Reparative Reading in Marina
Velasco Martas Que no se olvide (2023)
Caroline B. Colquhoun
Chapter 4: Age, Success, and Struggle in Jaime de Armińįns Mi querida
seńorita (1972)
Alicia Herraiz Gutiérrez
Chapter 5: Documenting Aging as a Trans Experience in Cantando en las azoteas
(2022)
Raquel Medina
Chapter 6: Veneno (2020): Resistance, Trangender Rage, and Resilience Despite
Invisibilization and Discrimination
Hernando C. Gómes Prada
Chapter 7: Generativity, Intergenerationality, and Older Gay Men in
Contemporary Spanish Cinema
Christopher R. Carter
Chapter 8: Doce Fįbulas (2007) by Lluķs Maria Todó as a Queer Aging Archive
of Barcelona
Heather Jerónimo
Chapter 9: And the Ghosts Danced With Us: Intergenerational Dialogues in AIDS
Performance
Isaias Fanlo
Index
Heather Jerónimo is Associate Professor of Spanish at the University of Northern Iowa, USA.
Raquel Medina is a visiting research fellow at Aston University, UK, and Dean of Area Studies at International Education of Students (IES Abroad Barcelona).