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Imagining Queer Time
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15 December 2026
While there is a growing number of sociological studies looking at LGBTQ+ ageing, these mostly focus on the intersection of age and sexual identity, often leaving out the impact of lived experiences on the ageing process. Imagining Queer Time delves into the ageing experience of older same-sex couples in Scotland by studying the intersection of their past, present, and future, and by exploring their life stories in historical and political contexts.
Positioning the couples’ experiences within a UK-wide context of ageing of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ+) people, Dora Jandrić presents novel ideas on queer ageing and queer time with the context of older same-sex couples’ lived experiences. With implication beyond Scottish borders, this study explores the questions of belonging, time, and same-sex relationships and how they impact the ageing experience, offering a novel way of exploring queer time through the temporal narratives of older same-sex couples. Participant accounts highlight the role of the past and present in the couples’ imagination of the future, which is conceptualised through collective, interpersonal, and imagined relationships. Arguing for a closer examination of the relational aspect of personal biographies and the socio-historical contexts of people’s lives in studies about the experience of ageing in same-sex couples, the author gives voice to a (still) invisible population in ageing and sexuality studies.
Concluding that the interpersonal, collective, and imagined relationships the participants formed during their lifetimes allowed them to imagine the future as utopian, this work puts forward a new idea about what constitutes queer time and how older LGBTQ+ people are main actors in its creation.
Dora Jandrić holds a PhD in sociology from the University of Edinburgh. She has explored LGBTQ+ ageing from both sociological and social care perspectives and is currently co-leading a project on queer political histories in Croatia, Romania and Sweden. She is also working as an EDI methodologist for the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Research Support Service at Newcastle University. Dora has been awarded a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellowship Seal of Excellence for her project on exploring the lived experiences of older LGBTQ+ people in Croatia.
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. Overview of Key Concepts and Contexts
Chapter 3. Methodology
Chapter 4. The Past and the Present: Interpersonal and Collective Relationships as Foundations for Imagined Futures
Chapter 5. Short-Term Futures: Independence, Choice, Control – Generational Identity and Collective Relationships
Chapter 6. Long-Term Future: Hope, Fear, and Trust
Chapter 7. Conclusion