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Online Resource
Online Resource
[Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AAGE ; Nachgewiesen 31.2010 -
UID:
gbv_818036435
Format: Online-Ressource
ISSN: 2374-2267
Language: English
Keywords: Zeitschrift
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Associated Volumes
  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    UID:
    gbv_187071394X
    ISSN: 2374-2267
    Content: Taking a comparative approach to two field sites – Shanghai in China and Dublin in Ireland – this paper explores the relationship between ageing, home, and the impact of the smartphone on domestic space. Although Shanghai and Dublin are extremely diverse contexts, both have seen rapid social shifts in recent decades, and domestic life seems to reflect these changes. Here, we outline how older people reconfigure their lives through the manipulation of their homes, variously upsizing, downsizing, and rightsizing – but also through sifting through their possessions, decluttering, and adopting or adapting to new domestic spaces in different ways. However, whereas these material practices may be found in cities worldwide, we examine the smartphone in domestic environments and consider how the digital expands, create, blurs, or traverses conventional views of the home in each field site. A central concept here is the ‘transportal home’ (Miller et al. 2021). Weaving perspectives from material and digital approaches in anthropology, we explore and expand the notion of the transportal home, as outlined in the comparative book, The Global Smartphone (Miller et al., 2021) and reiterated in brief here. We adopt this concept but take it further by asking how the transportal home differs in both fieldwork sites. This leads us to question the role of the transportal home in Shanghai and Dublin in terms of mediating, blurring, or traversing domestic boundaries, or expanding or shrinking social and architectural environments. Through these practices, conventional notions of home itself are challenged.
    In: Anthropology & Aging, [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AAGE, 2010, 44(2023), 2, Seite 45-58, 2374-2267
    In: volume:44
    In: year:2023
    In: number:2
    In: pages:45-58
    Language: English
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_1870721357
    ISSN: 2374-2267
    Content: Wild animals were once thought not to age, as their deaths were viewed as the consequences of constant exposure to the perennial risks of nature. Studies of non-human aging were largely confined to biological investigations, focusing upon short-lived species such as fruit flies, mice and nematodes. Over recent decades, this has changed, and studies of non-human aging have begun to investigate aging taking place in social contexts. The present paper reviews such work on social aging in non-human primate societies. Four themes were evident in seeking potential parallels between human and non-human social aging. These were social disengagement, social bonds or social capital, status rank and dominance, and kinship ties. No studies were found that had explored parent caregiving. The lack of clear evidence that agedness is perceived and recognised within non-human primate groups suggests that most age-associated behavioral changes are at best demi-regularities that map quite imprecisely upon social aging in human societies. However as non-human primate societies are becoming gradually confined to areas and environments established through human agency and human institutions, it is possible to speculate that non-human primate old age will become more common if less natural and as a result, perhaps more akin to social aging in human societies.
    In: Anthropology & Aging, [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AAGE, 2010, 44(2023), 1, Seite 37-56, 2374-2267
    In: volume:44
    In: year:2023
    In: number:1
    In: pages:37-56
    Language: English
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_1870712692
    ISSN: 2374-2267
    Content: This article offers a comparative ethnographic study of ageing as both category and experience. Drawing on simultaneous 16-month ethnographies conducted as part of the ASSA project, we focus on how ageing is being re-defined in eight contexts around the world, with particular focus on the authors’ field sites: rural and urban settings in both Japan and Uganda. Despite being among the world’s oldest and youngest populations, respectively, there are various affinities in both ethnographies of age and technology use related to the reconfiguration of family-care norms across distances. This shared finding informs the articulation of age categories, which we found to be negotiated in line with established intergenerational expectations and family roles. This paper is illustrated with ethnographic examples of how people redefine ageing in context and in turn bring ‘age’ to life, demonstrating the social significance of age categories.
    In: Anthropology & Aging, [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AAGE, 2010, 44(2023), 2, Seite 11-27, 2374-2267
    In: volume:44
    In: year:2023
    In: number:2
    In: pages:11-27
    Language: English
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_882814524
    ISSN: 2374-2267
    In: Anthropology & Aging, [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AAGE, 2010, 37(2016), 1, Seite 9-26, 2374-2267
    In: volume:37
    In: year:2016
    In: number:1
    In: pages:9-26
    Language: English
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  • 6
    UID:
    gbv_1870714563
    ISSN: 2374-2267
    Content: In this article we comparatively explore experiences and notions of retirement in two ethnographic sites of Milan, Italy, and Yaoundé, Cameroon, by paying attention to how grandparenting is perceived and practiced in relation to kinship roles and responsibilities. The paper draws on comparative insights from the ASSA project and focuses on Walton’s research in Milan and Awondo’s in Yaoundé, carried out between 2018–2019. The paper explores how both retirement and grandparenting can be embedded in social and moral narratives, gendered distinctions, and various idealisations, while also reflecting individual positionalities and economic roles and responsibilities. Our discussion moves beyond the family context as a unit for analysis, considering how grandparents enact care in urban communities and related online environments such as WhatsApp groups. After a brief introduction to the two field sites, the first section of the paper addresses retirement in Milan and Yaoundé, before turning to consider how grandparenting and retirement is linked to wider conceptions of obligation and freedom in these two different urban neighbourhood contexts.
    In: Anthropology & Aging, [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AAGE, 2010, 44(2023), 2, Seite 59-74, 2374-2267
    In: volume:44
    In: year:2023
    In: number:2
    In: pages:59-74
    Language: English
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  • 7
    UID:
    gbv_1870715497
    ISSN: 2374-2267
    Content: In this paper, we investigate whether there exists in different societies something analogous to the idea of ‘life purpose.’ Drawing on examples from across the entire range of ASSA project field sites, the paper is organised as a spectrum, starting from the case of Japan where ikigai is the most explicit example of having a life purpose and is a commonly used expression. We then argue that, in some regions, such as Palestine, the idea of life purpose is entirely subsumed within religion. This is followed by several cases where social reproduction seems to dominate life purpose, often based on securing the success of future generations. We then turn to more implicit examples of life purpose, starting with Xinyuan Wang’s study of the relationship between the Cultural Revolution and the smartphone revolution in Shanghai. We then examine the case of Ireland where life purpose is extrapolated from a more general expansive cosmology. We end the paper with the possibility that some people in England may see an advantage in not having any sense of life purpose. In the conclusion, we argue that, just as we now recognise that social cohesion does not require the moral guidance of religion, so too is there no need to have a category of life purpose. But, either implicitly or explicitly, most cultures do have a variety of ideals that we might equate with life purpose.
    In: Anthropology & Aging, [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AAGE, 2010, 44(2023), 2$p, 2374-2267
    In: volume:44
    In: year:2023
    In: number:2$p
    Language: English
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  • 8
    UID:
    gbv_1870722787
    ISSN: 2374-2267
    Content: In this article, we explore the particularities of belonging in old age for older adults living in Uummannaq in Northern Greenland. Through analysis of in-depth interviews and conversations, we investigate older adults’ relations to others and to places, and how belonging is a matter of moral and existential character. We use acts of belonging as an analytical concept to understand the everyday acts that older adults perform as their relations to family members, friends, and the community change, and their access to different places is challenged by declining health. We show how they continue to belong to others through activities such as preparing seal skin and fishing, but also how belonging can be challenged as one grows older. By doing so, we aim to show how belonging is not given or certain. Instead, it can be understood as an expression of agency when facing challenges in old age, not only in relation to others but also in how one sees oneself as an older adult.
    In: Anthropology & Aging, [Erscheinungsort nicht ermittelbar] : AAGE, 2010, 44(2023), 1, Seite 37-56, 2374-2267
    In: volume:44
    In: year:2023
    In: number:1
    In: pages:37-56
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
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