Thursday, May 16 2019

Welcome: B/OLD ideas about aging

André Roy, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Science, Concordia University

Shannon Hebblethwaite and Kim Sawchuk, Concordia University

Thursday, May 16
9:00 – 9:30am
De Sève Cinema

What is an age friendly city?

Making Montréal a city reflective of seniors’ needs
Nadia Bastien, City of Montreal

What is an age friendly local government?
Meghan Joy, Concordia University

The challenges of aging in an increasingly cosmopolitan and multi-ethnic city
Pascual Delgado, Alliance des communautés culturelles pour l’égalité dans la santé et les services sociaux (ACCÉSSS)

Thursday, May 16
9:30 – 11:00am
De Sève Cinema

Challenging dominant imaginaries of aging through intergenerational storytelling

Keynote address by May Chazan, Trent University

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This keynote will feature thought-provoking stories about activist aging, which call on us to rethink the core assumptions embedded within prevailing narratives, policies, and frameworks of “successful aging.” Dr. May Chazan will explore emerging findings from a multi-year project of intergenerational activist storytelling based at Trent University (in Peterborough, Ontario), asking how storytelling research might challenge dominant ways of understanding aging. Her work calls into to question widespread presumptions that certain bodies, minds, experiences, and subjectivities are deemed successful in later life, while others are either erased entirely from aging discourse or considered to be sub-optimal. The stories she offers open spaces for better understanding and supporting diverse aging futures.

Thursday, May 16
11:30am – 12:30pm
De Sève Cinema

The visibilities and invisibilities of aging

An interview with Fleurette Bilodeau, Community member and activist

Media coverage of older adults: many shades of grey
Mylène Moisan, Le Soleil

(In)visibility and well-being of gay and lesbian older adults
Julie Beauchamp, Centre for Research and Expertise in Social Gerontology (CREGES) and Jean Lalonde, activist for the well-being of LGBTQ older adults

RECAA in Action: Seniors for Social Change
Anne Caines, Respecting Elders: Communities Against Abuse

Thursday, May 16
2:00 – 16:00pm
De Sève Cinema

Friday, May 17 2019

Aging and our lived environments

Chez nous: Concordia’s intergenerational homeshare project
Satoshi Ikeda, Concordia University
Cecilia Marangon, Concordia University

Living in places with purpose
Janet Torge, Radical Resthomes

Micro-activist affordances: Disability, ecology and performance
Arseli Dokumaci, Concordia University

Friday, May 17
9:30 – 11:00am
De Sève Cinema

Co-designing for social futures: Playful and creative cities for older adults

Keynote address by Larissa Hjorth, RMIT University

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Much of the rhetoric around smart cities focuses on technology-centric approaches. Health, as we know, is far more complex than technology and medical solutions might suggest. Understanding health and ageing requires us to grapple with the complexity that is the social (Gawande 2015). Increasingly technologies are being designed with the notion of the social at its core through human-centric approaches. The datafied and algorithmic city is one in which the human (and its biases) can take a variety of ways—from redlining to playful cities. How might we playfully co-future for cities with growing ageing populations?

This talk focuses on creative and ethnographic approaches to how we might recalibrate the city as a playful and creative place that fosters ageing well. My approach is as an interdisciplinary maker and ethnographer interested in how we can learn from participants’ everyday practices to design together a social future for cities that places the importance on playful and creative intervention. I will draw from fieldwork conducted with older adult Pokémon Go uses, along with creative practitioners, to explore how we might curate conversations around ageing as a positive, playful and creative activity.

Friday, May 17
11:30am – 12:30pm
De Sève Cinema

Belonging in the city

Harmony in the city
Solange Baril, Groupe Harmonie

Building bridges: Fostering belonging through intergenerational engagement
Shannon Hebblethwaite, Concordia University

Engage me! Leveraging technology to support personhood, citizenship, and intergenerational connections
Jennifer Boger, University of Waterloo

Friday, May 17
2:00 – 3:30pm
De Sève Cinema