Later-Life Masculinities: (Re)forming the Gendered Lives of Older Men

Older men are often treated as homogenous, a-gendered, and unmasculine. Drawing on 52 interviews with older men who play walking football in the UK, we explore how their experiences can be understood through a lens of masculinity. Men claimed that walking football offers an outlet for both competiti...

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Veröffentlicht in:Men and masculinities 2024-06, Vol.27 (2), p.190-209
Hauptverfasser: Thomas, Gareth M., Thurnell-Read, Thomas
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description Older men are often treated as homogenous, a-gendered, and unmasculine. Drawing on 52 interviews with older men who play walking football in the UK, we explore how their experiences can be understood through a lens of masculinity. Men claimed that walking football offers an outlet for both competition and displaying physical prowess. Their embodied performances were crucial for cultivating a masculine identity which, whilst threatened by the ageing process, sustained their privilege and status. Yet, men also described how modes of care, friendship, and interdependence became central to their experiences. As men aged, the constraints around expressing feelings of intimacy, on account of hegemonic norms recognised in their youth, were loosened. Via the empirical analysis presented, the article contributes to both the study of the lives of older men and the continued absence of older men in masculinity theory.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/1097184X241231917
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subjects Hegemony
Homogeneity
Interviews
Intimacy
Leisure
Masculinity
Men
Older people
Physical fitness
title Later-Life Masculinities: (Re)forming the Gendered Lives of Older Men
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