Abstract

Recently, 194 World Health Organization member states called on the international organization to develop a global campaign to combat ageism, citing its alarming ubiquity, insidious threat to health, and prevalence in the media. Existing media studies of age stereotypes have mostly been single-sourced. This study harnesses a 1.1-billion-word media database comprising the British National Corpus and Corpus of Contemporary American English—with genres including spoken/television, fiction, magazines, newspapers—to provide a comprehensive view of ageism in the United Kingdom and United States. The US and UK were chosen as they are home to the largest media conglomerates with tremendous power to shape public opinion. The most commonly used synonym of older adults was identified, and its most frequently used descriptors were analyzed for valence. Such computational linguistics techniques represent a new advance in studying aging narratives. The key finding is consistent, though no less alarming: Negative descriptions of older adults outnumber positive ones by six times. Negative descriptions tend to be physical, while positive ones tend to be behavioral. Magazines contain the highest levels of ageism, followed by the spoken genre, newspapers, and fiction. Findings underscore the need to increase public awareness of ageism and lay the groundwork to design targeted societal campaigns to tackle ageism—one of our generation’s most pernicious threats.

Highlights

  • The Corpus of Contemporary American English (COCA) is the largest, balanced corpus of contemporary American English. It contains more than one billion words of text, including 20 million words each year from 1990, and it is divided among spoken, fiction, popular magazines, newspapers, and academic texts

  • In the UK, the highest prevalence of conversations related to older adults appeared in newspapers at 60.96 words per million while in the US, it was magazines at 30.99 words per million

  • This study contributed by detailing how ageism manifests across different genres of media

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Proposed by Butler [1], the concept of ageism was originally conceived as comprising three distinct but interrelated components: prejudicial attitudes, discriminatory behavior, and institutional policies. The term ‘ageism’ is more commonly understood as the stereotyping, prejudice and discrimination of people on the grounds of age [2].

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