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Declining to Decline: Aged Tough Guys in 'The Expendables' and 'The Expendables 2'
Author(s) -
Lisa-Nike Bühring
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of extreme anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2535-3241
DOI - 10.5617/jea.4528
Subject(s) - narrative , ideology , hegemony , hollywood , order (exchange) , ageing , mass media , sociology , action (physics) , gender studies , aesthetics , political science , history , politics , literature , law , art , medicine , physics , finance , quantum mechanics , economics , art history
Old age in western cultures under current neo-liberal ideology is increasingly linked to notions of decline, frailty and dependence as it is often equated with being unproductive and a burden to society. This case study is based on the belief that in order to change socio-cultural patterns one must first understand them. Consequently, this article aims to analyse the socio-cultural (re)production of narratives of ageing in general and particularly of narratives of male ageing – a topic often neglected in academic debates of ageing.Mass media represent today a major source for the development and maintenance of hegemonic socio-cultural standards.  As such their products need to be taken seriously even if their content might seem superficial and frivolous. A critical analysis of the commercially highly successful Hollywood action films The Expendables and The Expendables 2 will shed light on the cultural narratives of male ageing revealed in the two films and subsequently support a better understanding of the strategies used to transform narratives of decline commonly linked to ageing into stories of success and progress.

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