Abstract

This study explores how South Asian Indian Gujarati older adults in Canada (Greater Vancouver area) strive to maintain personal continuity, citizenship, and selfhood through everyday body management practices (exercise/yoga, medication/health supplements, skin, and hair care routines) and cultural markers such as food, sartorial choices, and community engagement. This examination, we contend, is noteworthy against the backdrop of contemporary North American academic and popular discourses of a burgeoning consumerist movement around the medicalization of bodies and anti-aging technologies. Drawing on in-depth qualitative interviews of 26 older adults, we discuss how growing old in the diaspora is marked with moral ambivalence between ‘successful aging’ and ‘aging gracefully.’ Based on an inductive thematic analysis, we identify four major themes in how the older diaspora negotiate aging and reorganise their lives through changing social relations and shifting cultural institutions. The first theme is the growing salience of both bodily and social changes in conceptualizing “old age,” and how the experiences of aging vary by gender. Specifically, while most of the female participants visualized old age in terms of a loss of physical functionality, the male participants described agedness in terms of a loss of economic and social worth. The second major theme encapsulates the acceptable coping strategies for dealing with bodily changes and the associated reconfigurations of social roles. While a fit body and functionality were regarded as foundational traits for aging well by all participants, corrective measures or anti-aging products were not espoused as the most culturally appropriate “Indian” way of growing old. The third theme highlights the apprehensions regarding growing old in a foreign country, including a foreboding anxiety of dependence and frailty in the absence of traditional familial care networks. The final theme, explores how for most participants, the notion of home evoked ambivalence in constructing their sense of belonging and identity, often expressed through everyday practices and memory-keeping. Taken together, we ultimately show how age and embodiment are inextricably linked in the experience of growing old in the diaspora.

Highlights

  • Led by the “successful” (Rowe and Kahn 1987) and “active” aging (United Nations 2002) paradigms, there has been a growing emphasis on individualism, positive affect, body image, and personal control over late-life outcomes in Western industrialized countries

  • Lawrence Cohen, in his anthropological classic, No Aging in India: Alzheimer’s, the Bad Family and Other Modern Things, argues that “old age in India is organized around an imminent ‘problem of aging’- more old people and less desire and ability to take care of them... [such that] the language of gerontology is alarmist, often apocalyptic” (Cohen 1998, 89)

  • Building on the theories of embodiment, we have examined how our respondents described and experienced their transition into old age

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Led by the “successful” (Rowe and Kahn 1987) and “active” aging (United Nations 2002) paradigms, there has been a growing emphasis on individualism, positive affect, body image, and personal control over late-life outcomes in Western industrialized countries. Taking into account these different forms of understanding aging and their merging through globalization we examine the resultant cultural tensions in aging by looking at the social experience of growing old among the South Asian Indian Gujarati diaspora in Canada. We ask how does the older South Asian Indian Gujarati diaspora perceive and experience aging? Second, what coping mechanisms do they employ to navigate changes in later life? how are later life identities shaped and reshaped in a transnational context? In what follows, we mine the sociological and gerontological scholarship (both theoretical and empirical) on the intersections of the body, consumerism, and aging whilst paying attention to the literature on diaspora

Literature Review
Method and Data
Study design
Study participants
Discussion
Limitation
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.