Sara Jamieson
Associate Professor
- B.A., M.A. (University of Toronto), Ph.D. (Queen鈥檚 University)
- Email Sara Jamieson
My research and teaching are situated within the field of age studies, which seeks to redress the marginalization of aging in humanities-based scholarship by stressing intersections of age with other forms of difference such as class, race, gender, and sexuality. In the context of a contemporary culture that prizes longevity but fears and denigrates aging and older people, I share with other age-studies scholars a commitment to literature as a form of cultural production that can ascribe value and complexity to older characters and envision what literary scholars Valerie Barnes Lipscomb and Aagje Swinnen call 鈥渁ge-just futures鈥. In line with age studies鈥 prioritization of the links among aging, disability, and care, much of my research and teaching has focused on representations of long-term care in contemporary texts that articulate a critique of the forms that care takes in such spaces while also imagining new possibilities for what it could be like.
My current research participates in extending the parameters of literary age studies beyond the later reaches of the life course by attending to fictional representations of middle age in the work of a range of authors writing in Canada from the 1960s to the present including Margaret Laurence, Richard B. Wright, Alice Munro, Carol Shields, Joe Ollmann, and Ann-Marie MacDonald. More specifically, I am interested in these authors鈥 fictional engagements with the 鈥渕idlife crisis鈥 as one of twentieth-century Western culture鈥檚 best known and widely shared narratives of middle age. Accounts of the genesis of the midlife crisis as an idea that rose to cultural prominence in the 1960s and 70s tend to characterize it as a period of psychic turmoil and depressive anxiety triggered by the [male] midlife subject鈥檚 newly urgent awareness of aging and mortality and manifesting in a sense of disillusionment with both work and family life. By contrast, the fictional worlds created by Canadian authors of the period highlight midlife crises experienced by both men and women, crises that have less to do with anxieties about personal finitude than with cultural, social, and economic factors such as the precarities affecting aging workers within a system of global capitalism, the expectations placed on the nuclear family as a life-long source of personal fulfillment and domestic happiness, and the prejudice against the no-longer-young that accompanied the rise of youth culture. Previous studies of midlife in literature have been reluctant to address the midlife crisis, possibly because its associations with discontent, regret, and failure threaten to reinforce a persistent and stigmatizing perception of aging as decline. By contrast, I argue that textual representations can also show us the generative, transformative potential of the midlife crisis as a site from which to recognize, question, and resist the concepts of decline and progress, success and succession, that are at the heart of (hetero)normative conceptions of individual aging and generational time in settler-colonialist, capitalist societies.
Recent Publications
鈥溾 British Journal of Canadian Studies. Vol. 37, no. 1, 2025, pp. 45-65.
鈥渁nd I may mutate into a matriarch鈥: Aging, Crisis, and Speculative Fiction in Margaret Laurence鈥檚 The Fire-Dwellers.鈥 Studies in Canadian Literature vol. 48, no. 2, 2023. forthcoming.
鈥淐rises of Queer Midlife in Ann-Marie MacDonald鈥檚 Adult Onset.鈥 University of Toronto Quarterly, vol. 93, no. 2, 2024, pp. 1-22.
鈥淐omics, Middle Age, and Second Adolescence: Joe Ollmann鈥檚 Mid-Life.鈥 Journal of Popular Culture, Vol. 53, No. 2, 2020, pp. 473-98.
鈥鈥 Age, Culture, Humanities: An Interdisciplinary Journal No. 4, 2019.
鈥淓thics and Infant Feeding in Alice Munro鈥檚 Stories.鈥 Ethics and Affects in the Fiction of Alice Munro. Edited by Amelia DeFalco and Lorraine York, Palgrave-Macmillan, 2018. 13-33.
鈥淎lice Munro and the Memorized Poem.鈥 Alice Munro鈥檚 Miraculous Art: Critical Essays. Ed. Janice Fiamengo and Gerald Lynch. University of Ottawa Press, 2017. 79-95.
鈥淩eading the 鈥楽t. Louis Whirligig鈥: Hockey, Masculinity, and Aging in Paul Quarrington鈥檚 King Leary鈥 Journal of Canadian Studies 48.3 (2014): 181-199.
鈥淩eading the Spaces of Age in Alice Munro鈥檚 鈥楾he Bear Came Over the Mountain.鈥 Mosaic: A Journal for the Interdisciplinary Study of Literature 47.3 2014. 1-17.
鈥溾楽urprising Developments鈥: Midlife in Alice Munro鈥檚 Who Do You Think You Are?鈥 Canadian Literature 217 (2013): 54-71.
鈥淛oan Barfoot鈥檚 Exit Lines and the Pastoral of Old Age.鈥 American Review of Canadian Studies 42.2 (2012): 370-83.
Recent Presentations
鈥淵outh Culture and Midlife in the Literature of the 1970s鈥 Presented to the European Network of Aging Studies 2022 Conference, Bucharest , Romania (online), Sept. 28, 2022.
鈥溾榊ou can鈥檛 keep up with what the kids like鈥: Age Discrimination in Richard B. Wright鈥檚 In the Middle of a Life.鈥 Presented to the Association for Canadian and Quebec Literatures Annual Conference, May 26, 2022.
鈥淨ueering the Midlife Crisis: It Gets Better and (Un)Successful Aging.鈥 Presented at 鈥淕ender and Age/Aging in the Context of Popular Culture,鈥 University of Graz, Austria (online), June 24, 2021.
鈥淢idlife Motherhood and Queer Temporalities in Ann-Marie MacDonald鈥檚 Adult Onset.鈥 Presented to the Association for Canadian and Quebec Literatures (on-line conference), May 29, 2021.
鈥淐omics, Middle Age, and Second Adolescence: Joe Ollmann鈥檚 Midlife.鈥 鈥淐omics, Middle Age, and Second Adolescence: Joe Ollmann鈥檚 Mid-Life.鈥 Presented at Take Back Aging: Power, Critique, Imagination: A Joint International Conference of the North American and European Networks in Aging Studies, May 28-31, 2019, Trent University.