Embodied Aging: Everyday body practices and Later Life Identities among the South Asian Indian Gujarati Diaspora in Canada

IF 0.7 Q4 GERONTOLOGY Anthropology & Aging Pub Date : 2021-11-11 DOI:10.5195/aa.2021.304
Anusmita Devi, Laura Hurd, Tannistha Samanta
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This study explores how South Asian Indian Gujarati older adults in Canada (Greater Vancouver area) strive to maintain personal continuity, citizenship, and selfhood through everyday body management practices (exercise/yoga, medication/health supplements, skin, and hair care routines) and cultural markers such as food, sartorial choices, and community engagement. This examination, we contend, is noteworthy against the backdrop of contemporary North American academic and popular discourses of a burgeoning consumerist movement around the medicalization of bodies and anti-aging technologies. Drawing on in-depth qualitative interviews of 26 older adults, we discuss how growing old in the diaspora is marked with moral ambivalence between ‘successful aging’ and ‘aging gracefully.’ Based on an inductive thematic analysis, we identify four major themes in how the older diaspora negotiate aging and reorganise their lives through changing social relations and shifting cultural institutions. The first theme is the growing salience of both bodily and social changes in conceptualizing “old age,” and how the experiences of aging vary by gender. Specifically, while most of the female participants visualized old age in terms of a loss of physical functionality, the male participants described agedness in terms of a loss of economic and social worth. The second major theme encapsulates the acceptable coping strategies for dealing with bodily changes and the associated reconfigurations of social roles. While a fit body and functionality were regarded as foundational traits for aging well by all participants, corrective measures or anti-aging products were not espoused as the most culturally appropriate “Indian” way of growing old. The third theme highlights the apprehensions regarding growing old in a foreign country, including a foreboding anxiety of dependence and frailty in the absence of traditional familial care networks. The final theme, explores how for most participants, the notion of home evoked ambivalence in constructing their sense of belonging and identity, often expressed through everyday practices and memory-keeping. Taken together, we ultimately show how age and embodiment are inextricably linked in the experience of growing old in the diaspora.
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体现的衰老:加拿大南亚印度古吉拉特侨民的日常身体锻炼和晚年身份
这项研究探讨了加拿大(大温哥华地区)的南亚裔印度裔古吉拉特老年人如何通过日常身体管理实践(锻炼/瑜伽、药物/健康补充剂、皮肤和头发护理)和文化标记(如食物、服装选择和社区参与)来努力保持个人连续性、公民身份和自我。我们认为,在当代北美学术界和大众围绕身体医学化和抗衰老技术展开的消费主义运动的背景下,这项研究是值得注意的。通过对26名老年人的深入定性采访,我们讨论了在散居国外的人中变老是如何在“成功衰老”和“优雅衰老”之间产生道德矛盾的基于归纳主题分析,我们确定了四个主要主题,即散居国外的老年人如何通过改变社会关系和文化制度来应对老龄化和重组生活。第一个主题是身体和社会变化在概念化“老年”方面日益突出,以及衰老的经历如何因性别而异。具体而言,虽然大多数女性参与者将老年视为身体功能的丧失,但男性参与者将老年描述为经济和社会价值的丧失。第二个主要主题概括了可接受的应对策略,以应对身体变化和相关的社会角色重组。虽然所有参与者都认为健康的身体和功能是衰老的基本特征,但矫正措施或抗衰老产品并没有被认为是最符合文化的“印度人”变老方式。第三个主题强调了对在外国变老的担忧,包括在缺乏传统家庭护理网络的情况下对依赖和脆弱的不祥焦虑。最后一个主题探讨了对大多数参与者来说,家的概念如何在构建归属感和身份认同感时引发矛盾心理,这种矛盾心理通常通过日常实践和记忆来表达。总之,我们最终展示了在散居国外的人变老的经历中,年龄和化身是如何密不可分的。
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来源期刊
Anthropology & Aging
Anthropology & Aging GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
9.10%
发文量
10
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊最新文献
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