Description

Book Synopsis
This book investigates the changing culture of grandparenting. Depending on the group, the period, and the family, grandparents have been powerful patriarchs and matriarchs, reliable second parents, dependents, burdens, or community figures. The book examines the history of grandparenting and the changing depiction of grandparent culture from old to hip, including the development of the celebrity grandparent, the emergence of media technologies that allow for new communication and relationships between grandparents and their grandchildren, new rituals associated with grandparenting, the growth of the marketing of grandparenting as a new stage of life, and the impact on our culture of the commodification of grandparenting. Prior to the twentieth century, within the United States the idea of the modern grandparent likely did not even exist. Many people did not live long enough to reach the grandparent stage of life. Today, people are living longer, and grandparenting is occupying a longe

Trade Review
Dr. Laura Tropp, once again, ruptures the ways in which we think about everyday life events and relationships and, more importantly, how we experience them. In her first book, A Womb With A View, Tropp exposes a class-based branding and marketing of pregnant women. And now, in Grandparents in a Digital Age, Tropp poignantly explores the shifting images of aging to aptly challenge traditional notions of what it means to be a grandparent in our digital culture today. Simply put, Tropp pins the changing social function of grandparents in ways that no longer resonate with the archetypal role of aging. -- Roksana Badruddoja, Associate Professor of Sociology and Women and Gender Studies, Manhattan College
Grandparents in a Digital Age: The Third Act charts exciting new territory in its exploration of the media-rich lives of an often-overlooked population. Grounded in interviews with grandparents and those who market to them as well as textual analysis of the representations of grandparents in a variety of media (including advertising, television, film, user-generated media, and social media), Tropp makes visible the expansive popular culture world of grandparents that often remains unseen. This deftly written account explores how social, political, economic, and technological shifts in our digital culture are creating a new life stage that reinvents grandparenting and the grandparent identity. -- Emilie Zaslow, Pace University
A strikingly fresh look at the challenges and changing roles of grandparents today. It will be an important book for those in family studies and social sciences and for those who care about the future and the stability of the American family. -- Janice Kelly, Molloy College

Table of Contents
Introduction: Age as Superpower Chapter 1: The Grandparent Shift Chapter 2: Grandparenting as a Lifestage Chapter 3: Chasing Visibility Chapter 4: Grandparenting as Second Chance Chapter 5: Performing Granny and Pop Chapter 6: The Grandparent-Industrial Complex Conclusion: The Grandparent Paradox

Grandparents in a Digital Age

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    A Hardback by Laura Tropp

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      View other formats and editions of Grandparents in a Digital Age by Laura Tropp

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/23/2018 12:11:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498575782, 978-1498575782
      ISBN10: 1498575781

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This book investigates the changing culture of grandparenting. Depending on the group, the period, and the family, grandparents have been powerful patriarchs and matriarchs, reliable second parents, dependents, burdens, or community figures. The book examines the history of grandparenting and the changing depiction of grandparent culture from old to hip, including the development of the celebrity grandparent, the emergence of media technologies that allow for new communication and relationships between grandparents and their grandchildren, new rituals associated with grandparenting, the growth of the marketing of grandparenting as a new stage of life, and the impact on our culture of the commodification of grandparenting. Prior to the twentieth century, within the United States the idea of the modern grandparent likely did not even exist. Many people did not live long enough to reach the grandparent stage of life. Today, people are living longer, and grandparenting is occupying a longe

      Trade Review
      Dr. Laura Tropp, once again, ruptures the ways in which we think about everyday life events and relationships and, more importantly, how we experience them. In her first book, A Womb With A View, Tropp exposes a class-based branding and marketing of pregnant women. And now, in Grandparents in a Digital Age, Tropp poignantly explores the shifting images of aging to aptly challenge traditional notions of what it means to be a grandparent in our digital culture today. Simply put, Tropp pins the changing social function of grandparents in ways that no longer resonate with the archetypal role of aging. -- Roksana Badruddoja, Associate Professor of Sociology and Women and Gender Studies, Manhattan College
      Grandparents in a Digital Age: The Third Act charts exciting new territory in its exploration of the media-rich lives of an often-overlooked population. Grounded in interviews with grandparents and those who market to them as well as textual analysis of the representations of grandparents in a variety of media (including advertising, television, film, user-generated media, and social media), Tropp makes visible the expansive popular culture world of grandparents that often remains unseen. This deftly written account explores how social, political, economic, and technological shifts in our digital culture are creating a new life stage that reinvents grandparenting and the grandparent identity. -- Emilie Zaslow, Pace University
      A strikingly fresh look at the challenges and changing roles of grandparents today. It will be an important book for those in family studies and social sciences and for those who care about the future and the stability of the American family. -- Janice Kelly, Molloy College

      Table of Contents
      Introduction: Age as Superpower Chapter 1: The Grandparent Shift Chapter 2: Grandparenting as a Lifestage Chapter 3: Chasing Visibility Chapter 4: Grandparenting as Second Chance Chapter 5: Performing Granny and Pop Chapter 6: The Grandparent-Industrial Complex Conclusion: The Grandparent Paradox

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