Is being a grandmother being old? cross-ethnic perspectives from New Zealand

This paper draws on a study of social aging among women in urban New Zealand for a comparative analysis of grandmother as a marker of being socially old. The paper features the views and perspectives of the women themselves and examines ethnic group identification as a source of variation. Data coll...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of cross-cultural gerontology 2003-09, Vol.18 (3), p.185-202
1. Verfasser: ARMSTRONG, M. Jocelyn
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description This paper draws on a study of social aging among women in urban New Zealand for a comparative analysis of grandmother as a marker of being socially old. The paper features the views and perspectives of the women themselves and examines ethnic group identification as a source of variation. Data collected in a series of indepth interviews with women representing four ethnic groups indicate similar patterns regarding prevalence of transition to the role and recognition of grandmother as one of the roles treated by others as primary in definition of old, but differences regarding how the role is treated in self definitions. In the women's own definitions, being a grandmother is treated as one among a configuration of markers of old age and its significance rests on how the role connects with the other markers. Six other markers were implicated: a shorter future, social generativity, social status, seniority, social renewal, and social integration. Ethnic variation in how the grandmother role connects is evident in respect to all six and relatively strong in the case of social status, seniority, social renewal, and social integration. Indicated for further study is the influence of ethnic culture and also the interaction of ethnicity with other sources of variation such as age in years and marital status.
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Data collected in a series of indepth interviews with women representing four ethnic groups indicate similar patterns regarding prevalence of transition to the role and recognition of grandmother as one of the roles treated by others as primary in definition of old, but differences regarding how the role is treated in self definitions. In the women's own definitions, being a grandmother is treated as one among a configuration of markers of old age and its significance rests on how the role connects with the other markers. Six other markers were implicated: a shorter future, social generativity, social status, seniority, social renewal, and social integration. Ethnic variation in how the grandmother role connects is evident in respect to all six and relatively strong in the case of social status, seniority, social renewal, and social integration. 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source MEDLINE; Sociological Abstracts; SpringerLink Journals - AutoHoldings
subjects Aged
Ageing
Aging
Aging - ethnology
Aging - psychology
Biological and medical sciences
Comparative analysis
Couple and family
Cross-cultural analysis
Cross-Cultural Comparison
Development. Metamorphosis. Moult. Ageing
Ethnic Groups
Ethnicity
Female
Females
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Gender
Gerontology
Grandparents
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Middle Aged
New Zealand
Old age
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Racial Differences
Roles
Self Concept
Social integration
Social psychology
Studies
Tropical medicine
Vertebrates: anatomy and physiology, studies on body, several organs or systems
Women
title Is being a grandmother being old? cross-ethnic perspectives from New Zealand
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