Abstract

bell hooks has written approvingly of the ‘second phase’ of life as a time, in midlife after divorce and relationship breakdown, when women may move from a place of dependency and intimate inequalities towards stridently asserting their needs and desires. This article interrogates these claims about the ‘second phase’ of life through qualitative empirical study. The article builds on our earlier work critiquing narratives of reclaimed control and self-development in the so-called baby-boom generation, showing how the compounded forces of ageism, sexism, classism, and racism are ever-present in mid- and later life romance. We juxtapose two separate ethnographic studies of middle-aged women’s post-divorce moves towards repartnering, one with middle-class White British women and one with working-class British South Asian women, to break open questions of empowerment in mid-and later life. Narratives and practices of self-discovery and renewed independence were common in both our studies, but the motivations for and consequences of these moves were differentiated by intersecting power relations. Narratives of newfound independence did not translate evenly into intimate lives and dating practices, where respectability remained vital and obdurate. Friendship groups diffused sexual agency and worked to maintain traditional practices of femininity. At this juncture of life many types of complicated and often contradictory femininities were played out, and were refracted through differing generational, diasporic and kin moralities. Empowerment in midlife can be ambivalent, laced with continued vulnerabilites and is implicated in a range of intersectionalities.

Highlights

  • The ‘baby boom’ generation, born between the 1940s and the 1960s in Britain is often credited with pioneering creative ways of relating, doing intimacy and making families

  • This article departs from our earlier studies documenting the ever-presence of ageism and sexism in mid and later life romance, and how age and gender inequalities may be co-constituted by class and ‘race/ethnicity’ to break open questions of empowerment in intimate life

  • We compare how the women in our studies navigated their newfound independence and considered the possibility of new relationships, how they rebuilt their social lives in such a way as to meet single men, and how they negotiated dating alongside discourses of respectability, which emerge to be surprisingly obdurate in women of this generation

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Summary

Kaveri Qureshi

Abstract bell hooks has written approvingly of the ‘second phase’ of life as a time, in midlife after divorce and relationship breakdown, when women may move from a place of dependency and intimate inequalities towards stridently asserting their needs and desires. This article interrogates these claims about the ‘second phase’ of life through qualitative empirical study. Friendship groups diffused sexual agency and worked to maintain traditional practices of femininity At this juncture of life many types of complicated and often contradictory femininities were played out, and were refracted through differing generational, diasporic and kin moralities.

Introduction
Research settings and methods
Newfound independence and new relationships
Doing dating and disaggregating respectability
Concluding discussion
Author biographies
Full Text
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