Description

Book Synopsis
This is a story about aging in place in a world of global movement. Around the world, many older people have stayed still but have been profoundly impacted by the movement of others. Without migrating themselves, many older people now live in a far “different country” than the one of their memories. Recently, the Brexit vote and the 2016 election of Trump have re-enforced prevalent stereotypes of “the racist older person”. This book challenges simplified images of the old as racist, nostalgic and resistant to change by taking a deeper, more nuanced look at older people’s complex relationship with the diversity and multiculturalism that has grown and developed around them. Aging in a Changing World takes a look at how some older people in New Zealand have been responding to and interacting with the new multiculturalism they now encounter in their daily lives. Through their unhurried, micro, daily interactions with immigrants, they quietly emerge as agents of the very social change they are assumed to oppose.

Trade Review
"Sure to become a classic of urban ethnography. A powerful and much needed account of the way in which older people respond to and negotiate change within urban communities. The research challenges views which present older people as 'victims' of global change, providing a highly nuanced description of both the perceived challenges of migration, but also the positive ways in which it is incorporated into new ways of adapting to social change."— Christopher Phillipson, coeditor of Precarity and Ageing: Understanding Insecurity and Risk in Later Life
"Molly George’s book beautifully upends common assumptions about the widespread racism among elderly white Americans, Brits, and New Zealanders, offering a much more nuanced portrait of how ethnicity and migration are viewed by older generations. Examining everyday interactions between long-term residents and newcomers, Aging in a Changing World challenges stereotypical views of what it means to 'age in place' when places, and the people who occupy them, are in fact ever-changing. The result is a thought-provoking examination of multiculturalism as lived experience for the elderly."— Susanna Trnka, author of Traversing: Embodied Lifeworlds in the Czech Republic


Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
1 Aging in Times of Great Change
2 Global Movement, Everyday Multiculturalism, and Aging
3 Constructing the Field and Recruiting the Urban Stranger
4 “Then and Now”: Narratives of Change
5 Older New Zealanders’ Immigration-Related Concerns
6 A Surprise Twist? Older New Zealanders as Approachable and Accepting
7 Mentoring “Kiwiness”
8 Cosmopolitan Cadences
9 Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Notes
References
Index

Aging in a Changing World: Older New Zealanders

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    £999.99

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    A Hardback by Molly George

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      View other formats and editions of Aging in a Changing World: Older New Zealanders by Molly George

      Publisher: Rutgers University Press
      Publication Date: 15/10/2021
      ISBN13: 9781978809413, 978-1978809413
      ISBN10: 1978809417

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This is a story about aging in place in a world of global movement. Around the world, many older people have stayed still but have been profoundly impacted by the movement of others. Without migrating themselves, many older people now live in a far “different country” than the one of their memories. Recently, the Brexit vote and the 2016 election of Trump have re-enforced prevalent stereotypes of “the racist older person”. This book challenges simplified images of the old as racist, nostalgic and resistant to change by taking a deeper, more nuanced look at older people’s complex relationship with the diversity and multiculturalism that has grown and developed around them. Aging in a Changing World takes a look at how some older people in New Zealand have been responding to and interacting with the new multiculturalism they now encounter in their daily lives. Through their unhurried, micro, daily interactions with immigrants, they quietly emerge as agents of the very social change they are assumed to oppose.

      Trade Review
      "Sure to become a classic of urban ethnography. A powerful and much needed account of the way in which older people respond to and negotiate change within urban communities. The research challenges views which present older people as 'victims' of global change, providing a highly nuanced description of both the perceived challenges of migration, but also the positive ways in which it is incorporated into new ways of adapting to social change."— Christopher Phillipson, coeditor of Precarity and Ageing: Understanding Insecurity and Risk in Later Life
      "Molly George’s book beautifully upends common assumptions about the widespread racism among elderly white Americans, Brits, and New Zealanders, offering a much more nuanced portrait of how ethnicity and migration are viewed by older generations. Examining everyday interactions between long-term residents and newcomers, Aging in a Changing World challenges stereotypical views of what it means to 'age in place' when places, and the people who occupy them, are in fact ever-changing. The result is a thought-provoking examination of multiculturalism as lived experience for the elderly."— Susanna Trnka, author of Traversing: Embodied Lifeworlds in the Czech Republic


      Table of Contents
      List of Illustrations
      1 Aging in Times of Great Change
      2 Global Movement, Everyday Multiculturalism, and Aging
      3 Constructing the Field and Recruiting the Urban Stranger
      4 “Then and Now”: Narratives of Change
      5 Older New Zealanders’ Immigration-Related Concerns
      6 A Surprise Twist? Older New Zealanders as Approachable and Accepting
      7 Mentoring “Kiwiness”
      8 Cosmopolitan Cadences
      9 Conclusions
      Acknowledgments
      Notes
      References
      Index

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