| Literature DB >> 29081559 |
Abstract
This study explores the social construction of agency and wellbeing among 20 Chinese urban retirees aged between 50 and 82 years old (averaging 67), with a special focus on the impact of earlier life experiences in shaping later-life pathways. Today's retirees in urban China have experienced the communist collectivist ideology during the Mao era as well as the changes to everyday life brought about by the economic transformation from centrally planned socialism to a market-orientated economy. Thereby, life in retirement for Chinese elders becomes more than just an issue of dealing with increases in discretionary time after exit from full-time work, but also one of making sense of their earlier life experiences in the midst of dramatic social changes. A grounded theory approach with semi-structured, in-depth, face-to-face interviews was used for data collection and analysis. Three interrelated themes emerged: (a) reminiscence as a mechanism of meaning-making, (b) discovery and exercise of agency in later life in contrast to a rigidly structured earlier life, and (c) varying pathways to constructing the life-stage of retirement. The findings have refuted gerontological literature and public discourse that often portray Chinese elders as passive care recipients or helpless dependants. Further, the present study has practical implications for developing policies, designing programmes and providing services to improve the quality of life for today's older Chinese people.Entities:
Keywords: agency; grounded theory; historical context; pathways in retirement; reminiscence; social change; urban China
Year: 2016 PMID: 29081559 PMCID: PMC5647664 DOI: 10.1017/S0144686X16000830
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ageing Soc ISSN: 0144-686X
Participants’ demographic profile
| Name | Gender | Age | Marital status | Education | Religious affiliation | Retirement status | Occupation | Residence | Children | Grand children | Health concern | Monthly income (yuan) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tang | F | 82 | Married | College | NA | Officially retired at 65 and now working part-time | Physician | With husband and grandchild (the younger son's child) | Two sons | Two | Back pain caused by a slipped disc | 6,000 |
| Su | M | 74 | Widowed and co-habiting | Junior High School (evening college) | NA | Retired at 60 and now teaching at a technical college | Administrative staff in a factory | With co-habiting partner | Two daughters (former wife's) and one son (current partner's) | Three | NA | 4,100 |
| Zheng | F | 64 | Widowed | High School | NA | Internally retired at 50, fully retired at 55, and now working part-time | Factory worker; services section (military spouse) | Living alone | One daughter and one son | None | NA | 1,500 |
| Dai | F | 56 | Married | Junior College | Buddhist | Internally retired at 45 and fully retired at 55 | Cashier at a bank | With husband, daughter, son-in-law and granddaughter | Only daughter | One | Hypertension and blood supply problem caused by menopause | 2,500 |
| Chang | F | 50 | Married | High School | NA | Exited from work in 1986 and quit her second job in 2001 | Staff at a pharmaceutical factory (five years) and contract worker at a state-owned insurance company (seven years) | With husband and daughter | Only daughter | None | Coronary bypass surgery | 0 |
| Luo | F | 55 | Married | High School | Buddhist | Internally retired at 45 and fully retired at 50 | State-owned factory worker | With husband and daughter | Only daughter | None | NA | 1,400 |
| Wei | M | 66 | Married | College | NA | Left the position at 53, fully retired at 55, and now serving the community | Administrative staff at a professional school; pharmaceutical factory; self-employed; director of community committee | With wife | Two daughters | One | NA | 2,300 |
| Yang | M | 64 | Married | Vocational Secondary School | NA | Retired at 60 | Bank clerk (managerial personnel) | With wife, son, daughter-in-law and grandson | Only son | One | Diabetes and reduced hearing due to childhood tympanitis | 3,000 |
| Peng | F | 66 | Married | Vocational Secondary School | NA | Retired at 55 | Administrative staff at a state-owned shopping mall; staff at the foreign exchange merchandise supply station | With husband, son, daughter-in-law and granddaughter | Only son | One | NA | 1,800 |
| Ma | M | 74 | Married | Vocational Secondary School | NA | Retired at 60 and now working part-time | Senior engineer at a design institute | With wife | One son and one daughter | Two | NA | 10,000 |
| Ni | F | 77 | Widowed | Vocational Secondary School | NA | Retired at 45 | Factory worker (transferred from cadre) | Alone | Three daughters and two sons | Five | Hypertension and heart problems | 1,850 |
| Wu | M | 67 | Married | High School | Buddhist | Internally retired at 53 and fully retired at 60 | Logistics staff at a professional school | With wife | Two sons | One | NA | 2,000 |
| Gao | F | 57 | Married | Junior College | NA | Retired at 55 and now working part-time | Accountant | With husband, daughter, son-in-law and grandson | Only daughter | One | NA | 2, 600 |
| He | M | 70 | Married | High School | NA | Internally retired at 55, fully retired at 60, and now working part-time | Military representative in a factory; cadre at the Geology Bureau | With wife | Two daughters | Two | Coronary bypass surgery | 4,000 |
| Ai | F | 80 | Married | Junior College | NA | Retired at 55 | Middle school teacher | With husband | Two sons | Two | Use of hearing-aid | 3,000 |
| Cao | M | 64 | Married | Primary School | NA | Internally retired at 55 and fully retried at 60 | Factory worker | With wife, son, daughter-in-law and grandchild | Two daughters and one son | Three | NA | 1,800 |
| Li | F | 63 | Married | High School | NA | Fully retired at 50 | Bus driver | With husband | One son and one daughter | One | NA | 1,400 |
| Kong | F | 66 | Widowed | Junior High School | NA | Retired at 49 (chose to retire one year earlier) | Administrative staff at a bus company | With daughter and grandson | One son and one daughter | Two | Birth hypertyreosis | 1,400 |
| Bai | M | 60 | Married | Junior High School | NA | Retired at 60 | Managerial staff at the Provincial Electric Power Company | With wife | Only son | One | NA | 18,000 |
| Fan | M | 65 | Married | High School | NA | Internally retired a 55 and fully retired at 60 | Machine maintenance worker | With wife | One son and one daughter | None | NA | 1,500 |
Notes: M: male. F: female. NA: not applicable.
Figure 1.The theoretical model that explicates the social process of meaning-making through claiming and exercising human agency among Chinese retirees in contrast to their rigidly planned earlier lives.