Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10513321 | Journal of Aging Studies | 2005 | 18 Pages |
Abstract
This research was undertaken at a West Coast USA sheltered retirement community where fifteen able elder residents were interviewed about their personal relationships and communication with peers, family and younger people. This paper focuses on respondent's discursive constructions of their relationships with family-particularly adult grandchildren. The analysis shows how respondents' talk about family relationships is largely positive and discusses how respondents build an image of intergenerational solidarity through their accounts of frequency and quality of contact with grandchildren. Some of the ways that intergenerational solidarity is communicated in the context of the interview are: discounting of family problems; cataloguing achievements and talking about grandchildren with pride; demonstrating that they-the elder-are valued; and accounts of how problematic aspects of their relationships are avoided in intergenerational talk.
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Authors
Angie Williams, Jacqui Guendouzi,