| Literature DB >> 28610750 |
Ilyan Ferrer1, Amanda Grenier2, Shari Brotman3, Sharon Koehn4.
Abstract
This article proposes the development of an intersectional life course perspective that is capable of exploring the links between structural inequalities and the lived experience of aging among racialized older people. Merging key concepts from intersectionality and life course perspectives, the authors suggest an analytic approach to better account for the connections between individual narratives and systems of domination that impinge upon the everyday lives of racialized older people. Our proposed intersectional life course perspective includes four dimensions: 1) identifying key events and their timing, 2) examining locally and globally linked lives, 3) exploring categories of difference and how they shape identities, 4) and assessing how processes of differentiation, and systems of domination shape the lives, agency and resistance among older people. Although applicable to various forms of marginalization, we examine the interplay of racialization, immigration, labour and care in later life to highlight relationships between systems, events, trajectories, and linked lives. The illustrative case example used in this paper emerged from a larger critical ethnographic study of aging in the Filipino community in Montreal, Canada. We suggest that an intersectional life course perspective has the potential to facilitate a deeper understanding of the nexus of structural, personal and relational processes that are experienced by diverse groups of older people across the life course and into late life.Entities:
Keywords: Critical gerontology, racialization; Ethnogerontology; Im/migration; Intersectionality
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28610750 DOI: 10.1016/j.jaging.2017.02.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Aging Stud ISSN: 0890-4065