Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Old Age identity
- Family
- Parsons
- Elderly have less status in society they lose their most important social role
- Disengagement theory, elderly people disengage from their previous roles and
'harvest the fruits of their labours'
- Old age identity is socially constructed to be a period of disengagement so that
society can function harmoniously
- Disengagement process
- Media
- Portraying old people in a stereotyped wasy
- Carrigan and Szmigin
- Depictions of older people feature caricature and negative
images such as smelly and incontinent
- Sontag
- Suggests that there is a double standard of ageing women
are required to youthful through out their media careers
and men are not
- Peer group
- Inclusion into new groups by taking up activities during retirement
- Clarke and Warren
- Old age may be a time to make new friends and engage in new interests.
- Active ageing is when this period of life provides new opportunities and can be
seen as an active and engaged stage of life
- Workplace
- Excluding them by being institutionally ageist.
- Johnson
- ageism occurs in the workplace. It is institutionalised and
embedded in practices and society.
- Stereotypical assumptions about a person's
competency to do a job.
- Religion
- sense of comfort when facing death
- Voas
- The generational effect and the ageing effect
- Hockey and James
- Old people are infantilised