Kommande
559:-
Throughout Poland, tens of thousands of elderly people live with disabilities in four-storey walk-up apartment buildings. In many cases their children have emigrated; they live with loneliness, a lack of basic amenities, silence, and the absence of care. They are known as prisoners of the fourth floor. In Randias Quiet Theatre Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston mixes autofiction, ethnography, and theatrical improvisation to unravel the politics of aging in Poland. At the centre of the book is Randia, a Romani fortune-teller, storyteller, and performer confined to her fourth-floor apartment in old age. In interviews, Randias identity is fixed: she tells of the hardships she faced as a Romani girl and as a wife, mother, and grandmother whose relationship with her family was shaped by separation, sickness, and death. But in storytelling sessions staged in her home, Randia steps into characters and is freed: her stories move between the past, the present, and the future, across life and death; her characters look after one another and change history. Kazubowski-Houston finds in Randias performances a quiet activism through which she envisages alternative lives and articulates an ethics of care among individuals, communities, and spirits. Interwoven throughout Randias Quiet Theatre are Kazubowski-Houstons own stories about caring for her elderly and disabled mother, making the book a collaborative, reflexive, and complex creative work. It reveals how ethnographers and their interlocutors can stand on more equal ground. Ultimately it is a profound reflection on how the elderly can live with dignity and how we can care for each other.
- Format: Pocket/Paperback
- ISBN: 9780228024781
- Språk: Engelska
- Antal sidor: 296
- Utgivningsdatum: 2025-05-13
- Förlag: McGill-Queen's University Press