Literature DB >> 22566111

Bodies, technologies, and aging in Japan: thinking about old people and their silver products.

Susan O Long1.   

Abstract

Contemporary Japan is known both for its high tech culture and its rapidly aging population, with 22 % of people currently 65 years and older. Yet there has been little attention to the material culture of the elderly. This paper explores the way aging bodies, official ideology, and consumption of what are called "assistive devices" and "life technologies" come together in the experience of frail old people who depend not only on human caregivers but on "things" such as walkers, kidney dialysis machines, and electric massage chairs. It begins to consider the questions: What technology to aid failing bodies is available, and to whom? How does the advocacy of independence create new forms of consumption? How do "things" mediate ideological change regarding elder care and help to create new understandings of self and one's relation to others? Data come from interviews conducted in 2003-2007 as part of a study of elder care in Japan under the public long term care insurance system that began in 2000. These interviews point both to acceptance of the technology as a way to avoid over-dependence on caregivers, and to resistance to the limitations of aging and to its 21st century definition by the state.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22566111     DOI: 10.1007/s10823-012-9164-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol        ISSN: 0169-3816


  8 in total

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2.  Culture and long-term care: the bath as social service in Japan.

Authors:  John W Traphagan
Journal:  Care Manag J       Date:  2004

3.  Output that counts: pedometers, sociability and the contested terrain of older adult fitness walking.

Authors:  Denise A Copelton
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2009-12-09

4.  Doing it my way: old women, technology and wellbeing.

Authors:  Meika Loe
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2010-02-08

5.  'But obviously not for me': robots, laboratories and the defiant identity of elder test users.

Authors:  Louis Neven
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2010-02-08

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Authors:  D Maeda; K Teshima; H Sugisawa; Y S Asakura
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  1989-04

7.  The great efficacy of personal and equipment assistance in reducing disability.

Authors:  L M Verbrugge; C Rennert; J H Madans
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1997-03       Impact factor: 9.308

8.  A study of factors facilitating and inhibiting the willingness of the institutionalized disabled elderly for rehabilitation: a United States-Japanese comparison.

Authors:  M Ushikubo
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  1998
  8 in total
  3 in total

Review 1.  In search of the everyday life of older people in Japan: reflections based on scholarly literature.

Authors:  Monika Wilińska; Els-Marie Anbäcken
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2013-12

2.  Postponing Passage: Doorways, Distinctions, and the Thresholds of Personhood among Older Chicagoans.

Authors:  Elana D Buch
Journal:  Ethos       Date:  2015-03-01

3.  Welfare Technologies and Ageing Bodies: Various Ways of Practising Autonomy.

Authors:  Anne Marie Dahler
Journal:  Rehabil Res Pract       Date:  2018-06-25
  3 in total

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