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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文探讨了新加坡北部住宅区 B Town 的一些老年居民如何通过 "认真的休闲 "和 "虔诚的工作 "参与居民园艺师计划来进行社区建设。我利用 2020 年 2 月至 11 月期间对 60 至 81 岁的参与者进行的人种学实地调查数据,分析了他们如何通过参与建立彼此间的联系以及更广泛的 B 镇社区。特别是,我研究了在 20 世纪 80 年代之前,他们曾是坎榜(村庄)的农民,这一共同的身份标志如何将他们聚集在一起,并为他们继续参与居民园艺师的工作提供了依据。他们通过该计划建立起来的 "甘榜精神 "不仅建立了社会联系,还建立了排斥机制,阻止了更多老年人参与这些活动。这些发现凸显了参与者的能动性,并使 "居家养老/社区养老 "和 "积极养老 "的静态和/或单一概念复杂化。
Community Building Through Place-Making Activities: Older Landscapers in a Singaporean Residential Town.
This paper explores how some older residents in B Town, a residential estate in northern Singapore, engage in community building through their 'serious leisure' and 'devotee work' participation in a resident landscaper program. Using data from ethnographic fieldwork conducted from February to November 2020 with participants aged from 60 to 81, I analyze how they built connections with each other, and the wider B Town community, through their participation. Particularly, I examine how the shared identity marker of being former farmers in now-evicted kampungs (villages) before the 1980s drew them together, and informed their continued involvement as resident landscapers. The 'kampung spirit' that they built up through the program enabled the construction of not only social connections, but also exclusionary mechanisms that prevented more older adults from engaging in the activities. These findings highlight participants' agency, and complicate static and/or monolithic conceptualizations of 'aging in place/the community' and 'active aging'.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology is an international and interdisciplinary journal providing a forum for scholarly discussion of the aging process and issues of the aged throughout the world. The journal emphasizes discussions of research findings, theoretical issues, and applied approaches and provides a comparative orientation to the study of aging in cultural contexts The core of the journal comprises a broad range of articles dealing with global aging, written from the perspectives of history, anthropology, sociology, political science, psychology, population studies, health/biology, etc. We welcome articles that examine aging within a particular cultural context, compare aging and older adults across societies, and/or compare sub-cultural groupings or ethnic minorities within or across larger societies. Comparative analyses of topics relating to older adults, such as aging within socialist vs. capitalist systems or within societies with different social service delivery systems, also are appropriate for this journal. With societies becoming ever more multicultural and experiencing a `graying'' of their population on a hitherto unprecedented scale, the Journal of Cross-Cultural Gerontology stands at the forefront of one of the most pressing issues of our times.