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Ageing and new intimacies

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This book examines the romantic and intimate lives of the baby boom generation, often portrayed as pioneers of new ways of relating and family-making. As this cohort enters mid and later life, it i...
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  • 23 June 2026
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This book examines the romantic and intimate lives of the baby boom generation, often portrayed as pioneers of new ways of relating and family-making. As this cohort enters mid and later life, it is frequently claimed they are redefining ageing itself. Drawing on sensory ethnography in salsa classes and life-history interviews, the book explores women’s experiences of desire, romance, and renewed intimacies in midlife. Beginning with women at moments of transition—newly single or newly dating—it looks back over earlier relationships and forward to hopes for future connections. Their navigation of romance reveals the sensory and affective dimensions of heteronormativity and the gendered practices shaped by memory, generational expectations, and class. Challenging assumptions about baby boomers, the book highlights intersections of age, class, and white normativity, offering new insights into ageing, intimacy, and generation.
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Price: £25.00
Pages: 168
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 23 June 2026
ISBN: 9781526197856
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / General, Social and cultural anthropology, FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Life Stages / Later Years, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, Age groups: the elderly, Sociology: family and relationships

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'This sensational book analyses gendered ageing and embodiment through older women’s engagement with Salsa dancing. Milton skilfully interweaves generation, memory and new forms of intimacy in reframing normative ageing. This salsa ethnography reveals a world of safe sensuality through which older women navigate new intimacies through touch, flirting and friendship, alongside contempt often visited to ageing sexuality. A must-read, this book disrupts normative ideas of ageing and sexuality.'
—Sweta Rajan-Rankin, Reader, University of Kent

'Like all the best ethnographies, Sarah Milton’s beautifully written study combines a careful and detailed analysis with a compelling narrative. Attentive to the complexities of class, race, age and gender and their interactions, Milton provides her readers with a nuanced account of the lives of a group of women in middle age negotiating their social and intimate lives and reflecting on the conditions under which they make these negotiations.'
—Steph Lawler, Reader Emerita, University of York

‘In this lyrical account, Milton gently reveals the everyday ways that desire, love, romance and care are made and remade in midlife, helping us to glimpse the ways femininities are always on the move, lived and laughed about, even as they are painfully negotiated through the refractory lenses of class, race and gender. A subtle, profound book on the revolutions of ageing and intimacy.’

— Professor Lisa Baraitser, Birkbeck, University of London.

‘What a joyful book: a sensitively observed portrait of women in mid-life navigating new identities and relationships through the space of the Salsa class. This beautifully written book provides us with intimate, empirical perspectives on wider generational transitions around marriage, motherhood and work.’

— Professor Charlotte Faircloth, UCL Social Research Institute.

‘[in] this sensational book, Milton skilfully interweaves generation, memory and new forms of intimacy... revealing a world of ‘safe sensuality’ through which older women navigate new intimacies through touch, flirting and friendship, alongside contempt. A must-read, this book disrupts normative ideas of ageing and sexuality.’

— Dr Sweta Rajan-Rankin, University of Kent.

Sarah Milton is Senior Research Fellow in the Sociology of Health and Illness at King’s College London.

Introduction: revolutionary intimacies?
1: Salsa and safe sensuality
2: Memories, generations and multiple femininities
3: Compatibility and contempt
4: Glamour, hierarchical femininities and friendship
Conclusion: (re)negotiating ageing, gender and sexuality

Epilogue: updating dancing and dating

References
Index