Network member

Wendy Martin, PhD

Brunel University, UK

LinkedIn Research Gate Webpage

Dr Wendy Martin is Senior Lecturer in the Department of Health Sciences, Brunel University London. Her research focuses on ageing, embodiment, the digital and everyday life. She is Co-Investigator for the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) international partnership ‘Ageing, Communication, Technologies (ACT): experiencing a digital world in later life’ and Collaborator for the SSHRC Insight Grant ‘Digital Culture and Quantified Aging’. Wendy is Co-Convenor of the British Sociological Association Ageing, Body and Society study group, member of the Executive Committee of the British Society of Gerontology, Co-Editor of the Routledge Handbook of Cultural Gerontology and a Founding Board member of the Socio-Gerontechnology Network (SGN).

Recent publications

Peine A, Marshall B, Martin W and Neven L. (2021) ‘Socio-gerontechnology – Key Themes, Future Agendas’ in Peine, Alexander, Marshall, Barbara, Martin, Wendy and Neven, Louis (editors) Socio-gerontechnology Interdisciplinary Critical Studies of Ageing and Technology. Abingdon. Routledge

Peine A, Marshall BL, Martin W, Neven L. editors (2021) Socio-gerontechnology Interdisciplinary Critical Studies of Ageing and Technology Abingdon. Routledge

Pilcher, K and Martin, W (2020) ‘Forever ‘Becoming’? Negotiating Gendered and Ageing Embodiment in Everyday Life’ Sociological Research Online. 25 (4) 698-717

External links

Publications

Pilcher, K and Martin, W (2020) ‘Forever ‘Becoming’? Negotiating Gendered and Ageing Embodiment in Everyday Life’ Sociological Research Online. 25 (4) 698-717

Peine A, Marshall BL, Martin W, Neven L. editors (2021) Socio-gerontechnology Interdisciplinary Critical Studies of Ageing and Technology Abingdon. Routledge

Peine A, Marshall B, Martin W and Neven L. (2021) ‘Socio-gerontechnology – Key Themes, Future Agendas’ in Peine, Alexander, Marshall, Barbara, Martin, Wendy and Neven, Louis (editors) Socio-gerontechnology Interdisciplinary Critical Studies of Ageing and Technology. Abingdon. Routledge