
Folk Art and Aging: Life-Story Objects and Their Makers
Jon Kay
Growing old doesn't have to be seen as an eventual failure but rather as an important developmental stage of creativity. Offering an absorbing and fresh perspective on aging and crafts, Jon Kay explores how elders choose to tap into their creative and personal potential through making life-story objects. Carving, painting, and rug hooking not only help seniors to cope with the ailments of aging and loneliness but also to achieve greater satisfaction with their lives. Whether revived from childhood memories or inspired by their capacity to connect to others, meaningful memory projects serve as a lens for focusing on, remaking, and sharing the long-ago. These activities often help elders productively fill the hours after they have raised their children, retired from their jobs, and/or lost a loved one. These individuals forge new identities for themselves that do not erase their earlier lives but build on them and new lives that include sharing scenes and stories from their memories.
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About Jon Kay
Reviews for Folk Art and Aging: Life-Story Objects and Their Makers
Journal of American Folklore
Kay offers a valuable contribution to folk art studies with the nicely composed profiles of four men and one woman who took up folk arts intensively later in life.
Journal of Folklore Research
All too often, aging is regarded merely as an end-of-life period, and therefore those within that age-defined category are often treated in a somewhat condescending manner, as if lumped into one clinical entity, with similar needs and aspirations. Kay presents case studies which clearly stand as counter to such narrow thinking and generalizations regarding seniors and their abilities to interact in, and contribute to, their communities and society. Drawing on case studies of five well-chosen Indiana artisans—wood sculptor, rag-rug weaver, musical instrument maker, painter, and maker of wood canes—Kay offers a thoughtful, revealing meditation on the relationship between aging and art making. . . . Highly recommended.
Choice Reviews
Folk Art and Aging is a highly approachable book suitable for a broad audience. With its colored photographs, narrative writing style, and focus on research participants, the book is an ideal text for university courses in ethnography, material culture, folklore across the lifespan, and gerontology. Beyond the academic sphere, the book would be a welcome addition to the bookshelves of gerontologists, folklorists, and those who provide care for an elderly family member or client.
Western Folklore
Highly recommended.
Journal of the Royal Anthropology Institute