School of History and Philosophy of Science
RESEARCH SEMINAR
[The University of Sydney]
[https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20240811/7a/c0/93/d0/05b73c5cf4d7ef8f638297d2_1276x730.jpg]

The Gendering of Ageing in the Emergence of Biomedicine

Alison Downham Moore (Western Sydney University)

Dates: Monday, 19/08/2024
Time: 5:30pm
Venue: F09.331. Madsen Building. Madsen Seminar Room 331
How to register: Free, no registration required
Abstract: This talk is about how the sexes in ageing came to be differentiated 
in emergent biomedicine, with a focus on French, German, Latin and English 
texts of the seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. I consider what 
impact these ideas may have had on the modern medical description of menopause 
and andropause, proposing four distinct ‘temporal layers’ that converged in the 
historical bifurcation of the ageing sexes: 1. Early-modern uses of Ptolemaic 
astrology toward a theory of life-cycles and climacterics; 2. the emergent 
description of the specific diseases of women, 3. the intercultural discovery 
of women’s greater longevity, and 4. the ethnographic description of ageing and 
the elderly in diverse world cultures viewed through a colonial lens. Questions 
of sex difference in ageing not only impacted how older women were subject to 
far greater medicalisation than older men throughout the nineteenth century, 
but also enabled European physicians to reject vitalist premises that equated 
general health with longevity, instead bifurcating morbidity from mortality 
with reference to the emergent concept of chronic disease.



Bio: Alison Downham Moore is a historian of gender, medicine and health at 
Western Sydney University, author of 3 books, 60-odd peer-reviewed journal 
articles and book chapters, editor of 2 anthologies, 3 journal special 
editions, and is Editor-in-Chief of Australian Feminist Studies. She is 
currently completing the final outcomes of an ARC Discovery-funded project on 
'Sexual Ageing in the History of Medicine',  including a monograph contracted 
in the Cambridge University Press series Elements in the Global Health 
Humanities, from which her current to talk is drawn. Her most recent monograph, 
published by Oxford University Press in 2022 was The French Invention of 
Menopause and the Medicalisation of Women's Ageing.




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