scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Ageism: A Threat to “Aging Well” in the 21st Century:

Jocelyn Angus, +1 more
- 01 Apr 2006 - 
- Vol. 25, Iss: 2, pp 137-152
Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this article, the authors examine sageism in a range of political, social, and cultural manifestos that have a productive role in encoding tacit assumptions and stereotypes about older people's lives.
Abstract
At the beginning of the 21st century, the new mantra—“successful” and “resourceful” aging—is used interchangeably and intoned often unreflectively by a society eager to find ways to reduce aged-related losses. Yet despite numerous empirical studies and public health promotion strategies directed at ways of aging well, negative images of aging have an enduring vitality. This article examine sageism in a range of political, social, and cultural manifestos that have a productive role in encoding tacit assumptions and stereotypes about older people’s lives. Particular attention is given to the pervasive use of the concept of “dependency,” a stereotypic and productive ageist mechanism that continues to infiltrate what are arguably more inclusive strategies directed toward a global model of aging well. The authors explore some potential strategies to combat stereotypes and warn that aging well initiatives based on individualism and “self-responsibility” risk reproducing existing power relations that continue to...

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

‘Active ageing’: from empty rhetoric to effective policy tool

TL;DR: This strategy pays particular attention to the translation of the active-ageing concept to situations of dependency by centring on three key principles: fostering adaptability, supporting the maintenance of emotionally close relationships and removing structural barriers related to age or dependency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Successful Aging and Its Discontents: A Systematic Review of the Social Gerontology Literature

TL;DR: This paper conducted a systematic literature review using the following criteria: journal articles retrieved in the Abstracts in Social Gerontology, published 1987-2013, successful aging/ageing in the title or text (n = 453), a critique of successful aging models as a key component of the article.

Successful aging and its discontents: A systematic review of the social gerontology literature

TL;DR: The vast array of criteria that gerontologists collectively offered to expand Rowe and Kahn's original successful model is symptomatic of the problem that a normative model is by definition exclusionary.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconsidering Successful Aging A Call for Renewed and Expanded Academic Critiques and Conceptualizations

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that researchers need to be wary of adopting successful aging terminology without considering and expanding their understanding of the political motivations and results that accompanies it, and that new, expanded conceptualizations of successful aging are needed so that socially minded researchers and practitioners of gerontology do not contribute to ageism and discrimination against older adults.
BookDOI

Contemporary Perspectives on Ageism

TL;DR: A comprehensive European perspective on the concept of ageism, its origins, the manifestation and consequences, as well as ways to respond to and research ageism is provided in this article.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Self, Society, and the “New Gerontology”

TL;DR: This work argues that unexamined features of Rowe and Kahn's successful aging model may further harm older people, particularly older women, the poor, and people of color who are already marginalized, and suggests forms of resistance to this univocal standard.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Aging Enterprise.

Book

Reading Foucault for Social Work

TL;DR: Chambon and Chambon discussed the relationship between social work, social control, and normalization with Michel Foucault in a roundtable discussion with.
Book

Productive Aging: Concepts and Challenges

TL;DR: The history and current state of Productive AGING can be found in this paper, where the authors present a conceptual framework for Productive Aging in historical and sociological perspective, as well as a discussion of the political economy and the ideology of old age.