Literature DB >> 24655672

Permanent personhood or meaningful decline? Toward a critical anthropology of successful aging.

Sarah Lamb1.   

Abstract

The current North American successful aging movement offers a particular normative model of how to age well, one tied to specific notions of individualist personhood especially valued in North America emphasizing independence, productivity, self-maintenance, and the individual self as project. This successful aging paradigm, with its various incarnations as active, healthy and productive aging, has received little scrutiny as to its cultural assumptions. Drawing on fieldwork data with elders from both India and the United States, this article offers an analysis of cultural assumptions underlying the North American successful aging paradigm as represented in prevailing popular and scientific discourse on how to age well. Four key themes in this public successful aging discourse are examined: individual agency and control; maintaining productive activity; the value of independence and importance of avoiding dependence; and permanent personhood, a vision of the ideal person as not really aging at all in late life, but rather maintaining the self of one's earlier years. Although the majority of the (Boston-area, well-educated, financially privileged) US elders making up this study, and some of the most cosmopolitan Indians, embrace and are inspired by the ideals of the successful aging movement, others critique the prevailing successful aging model for insufficiently incorporating attention to and acceptance of the human realities of mortality and decline. Ultimately, the article argues that the vision offered by the dominant successful aging paradigm is not only a particular cultural and biopolitical model but, despite its inspirational elements, in some ways a counterproductive one. Successful aging discourse might do well to come to better terms with conditions of human transience and decline, so that not all situations of dependence, debility and even mortality in late life will be viewed and experienced as "failures" in living well.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Biopolitics; Critique of successful aging; Culture; Decline; Indian and US perspectives; Personhood

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24655672     DOI: 10.1016/j.jaging.2013.12.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Aging Stud        ISSN: 0890-4065


  13 in total

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2.  Perceptions of Successful Aging among Older Adults in Bangladesh: An Exploratory Study.

Authors:  Iftekhar Amin
Journal:  J Cross Cult Gerontol       Date:  2017-06

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

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

4.  Gender transitions in later life: a queer perspective on successful aging.

Authors:  Vanessa D Fabbre
Journal:  Gerontologist       Date:  2014-08-26

5.  Physical, social, psychological and existential trajectories of loss and adaptation towards the end of life for older people living with frailty: a serial interview study.

Authors:  Anna Lloyd; Marilyn Kendall; John M Starr; Scott A Murray
Journal:  BMC Geriatr       Date:  2016-10-20       Impact factor: 3.921

6.  Prudence, pleasure, and cognitive ageing: Configurations of the uses and users of brain training games within UK media, 2005-2015.

Authors:  Martyn Pickersgill; Tineke Broer; Sarah Cunningham-Burley; Ian Deary
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 4.634

7.  To Meet, to Matter, and to Have Fun: The Development, Implementation, and Evaluation of an Intervention to Fulfil the Social Needs of Older People.

Authors:  Tina Ten Bruggencate; Katrien G Luijkx; Janienke Sturm
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2019-06-28       Impact factor: 3.390

8.  Anti-aging technoscience & the biologization of cumulative inequality: Affinities in the biopolitics of successful aging.

Authors:  James Rupert Fletcher
Journal:  J Aging Stud       Date:  2020-10-21

9.  Successful Aging Among African American Older Adults With Type 2 Diabetes.

Authors:  Sarah Chard; Brandy Harris-Wallace; Erin G Roth; Laura M Girling; Robert Rubinstein; Ashanté M Reese; Charlene C Quinn; J Kevin Eckert
Journal:  J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci       Date:  2017-03-01       Impact factor: 4.077

Review 10.  Better Later Than Never: Meaning in Late Life.

Authors:  Nancy A Pachana; Roy F Baumeister
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2021-07-02
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