Abstract

Numerous studies have examined the experience of growing old in a transnational context among Indians. However, in most of these studies, the older adults had immigrated as senior citizens to be with their adult children. Indians who have grown old in transnational settings have not been examined in detail in the gerontological scholarship. Adopting a cross-cultural lens, the present study focusses on perceptions of ageing among older Indians who have grown old in the city of Saskatoon. The study demonstrates how these older Indians refute the Successful Ageing model and accept their physical weaknesses in their course of ageing. Additionally, the study also examines how caregiving arrangements and intergenerational relationships are shaped among these older Indians and their adult children, in a transnational city, such as Saskatoon. Finally, the study highlights how later life gender roles are constructed in a transnational backdrop.

Highlights

  • Several studies have analyzed the subjective experience of growing old among older South Asians in transnational contexts (Lamb, 2002, 2009; Treas & Mazumdar, 2002; Kalavar & Van-Willigen, 2005; Lunt, 2009; Patel, 2011; Sudha, 2014; Baldassar & Merla, 2014; Nare, 2017; De Silva, 2018; Hromadzic & Palmberger, 2018)

  • The main aim of this paper was to examine the perceptions of ageing, intergenerational relationships and gender roles among Indian older adults who have grown old in Saskatoon

  • A comparison of older adults living with their adult children and older adults not living with their adult children showed that individual privacy, space and freedom are integral components in shaping intergenerational relationships among older Indians and their families

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Summary

Introduction

Several studies have analyzed the subjective experience of growing old among older South Asians in transnational contexts (Lamb, 2002, 2009; Treas & Mazumdar, 2002; Kalavar & Van-Willigen, 2005; Lunt, 2009; Patel, 2011; Sudha, 2014; Baldassar & Merla, 2014; Nare, 2017; De Silva, 2018; Hromadzic & Palmberger, 2018). By highlighting the ageing experience of a sample population (Older Indians ageing in a transnational backdrop), underrepresented in research, this study is an attempt to expand the existing scholarship in the discipline of social gerontology

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