Anthropology & Aging https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age <p><em>Anthropology &amp; Aging</em> is the official journal of the Association for Anthropology, Gerontology, and the Life Course (AAGE), a nonprofit organization established in 1978 as a multidisciplinary group dedicated to the exploration and understanding of aging within and across the diversity of human cultures. </p> <p>The journal's perspective today remains holistic, comparative, and international. We are particularly interested in manuscripts that have cross-disciplinary appeal, that present cutting-edge research, and that bring creative and stimulating insight to aging studies and the human condition across the life course. <em>Anthropology &amp; Aging</em> strives to advance anthropological theory while contributing to knowledge at the intersection of anthropology and gerontology.</p> <p><a href="http://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/issue/view/45">Current Issue</a></p> <p><a title="Journal Announcements" href="https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/announcement">Announcements</a></p> <p><a title="Journal Focus and Scope" href="https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/about">Focus and Scope</a></p> <p><a title="Journal Open Access Policy" href="https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/about">Open Access Policy</a></p> <p><a title="Ethics, Diversity, and Inclusion Statements" href="https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/EDIStatements">Ethics / Diversity and Inclusivity Statements</a></p> <p><a title="Journal Editorial Advisory Board" href="https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/about/editorialTeam">Editorial Advisory Board</a></p> <p><strong> <a href="https://anthropologyandgerontology.com" target="_blank" rel="noopener"><img src="http://dev.anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/public/site/images/pkao/Picture12.png" alt="" /></a></strong><strong>As</strong><strong>sociation for Anthropology, Gerontology and the Life Course</strong></p> <p><span style="border-radius: 2px; 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text-indent: 20px; width: auto; padding: 0px 4px 0px 0px; text-align: center; font: bold 11px/20px 'Helvetica Neue',Helvetica,sans-serif; color: #ffffff; background: #bd081c no-repeat scroll 3px 50% / 14px 14px; position: absolute; opacity: 1; z-index: 8675309; display: none; cursor: pointer;">Save</span><span style="border-radius: 2px; text-indent: 20px; width: auto; padding: 0px 4px 0px 0px; text-align: center; font: bold 11px/20px 'Helvetica Neue',Helvetica,sans-serif; color: #ffffff; background: #bd081c no-repeat scroll 3px 50% / 14px 14px; position: absolute; opacity: 1; z-index: 8675309; display: none; cursor: pointer;">Save</span></p> University Library System, University of Pittsburgh en-US Anthropology & Aging 2374-2267 <p>Authors who publish with this journal agree to the following terms:</p><ol><li>The Author retains copyright in the Work, where the term “Work” shall include all digital objects that may result in subsequent electronic publication or distribution.</li><li>Upon acceptance of the Work, the author shall grant to the Publisher the right of first publication of the Work.</li><li>The Author shall grant to the Publisher and its agents the nonexclusive perpetual right and license to publish, archive, and make accessible the Work in whole or in part in all forms of media now or hereafter known under a <a title="CC-BY" href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License</a> or its equivalent, which, for the avoidance of doubt, allows others to copy, distribute, and transmit the Work under the following conditions:<ol type="a"><li>Attribution—other users must attribute the Work in the manner specified by the author as indicated on the journal Web site;</li></ol>with the understanding that the above condition can be waived with permission from the Author and that where the Work or any of its elements is in the public domain under applicable law, that status is in no way affected by the license.</li><li>The Author is able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the nonexclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the Work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), as long as there is provided in the document an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.</li><li>Authors are permitted and encouraged to post online a prepublication manuscript (but not the Publisher’s final formatted PDF version of the Work) in institutional repositories or on their Websites prior to and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and greater citation of published work. Any such posting made before acceptance and publication of the Work shall be updated upon publication to include a reference to the Publisher-assigned DOI (Digital Object Identifier) and a link to the online abstract for the final published Work in the Journal.</li><li>Upon Publisher’s request, the Author agrees to furnish promptly to Publisher, at the Author’s own expense, written evidence of the permissions, licenses, and consents for use of third-party material included within the Work, except as determined by Publisher to be covered by the principles of Fair Use.</li><li>The Author represents and warrants that:<ol type="a"><li>the Work is the Author’s original work;</li><li>the Author has not transferred, and will not transfer, exclusive rights in the Work to any third party;</li><li>the Work is not pending review or under consideration by another publisher;</li><li>the Work has not previously been published;</li><li>the Work contains no misrepresentation or infringement of the Work or property of other authors or third parties; and</li><li>the Work contains no libel, invasion of privacy, or other unlawful matter.</li></ol></li><li>The Author agrees to indemnify and hold Publisher harmless from Author’s breach of the representations and warranties contained in Paragraph 6 above, as well as any claim or proceeding relating to Publisher’s use and publication of any content contained in the Work, including third-party content.</li></ol><p><span style="font-size: 75%;">Revised 7/16/2018. Revision Description: Removed outdated link. </span></p> Introduction: Debating Desirable Aging Futures through Technology https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/555 Christine Verbruggen Jason Danely Copyright (c) 2024 Christine Verbruggen; Jason Danely http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 65 71 10.5195/aa.2024.555 Technology a Co-Actor in Kinning and ‘Desirable’ Aging? https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/552 Gomathy Kamala Naganathan Copyright (c) 2024 Gomathy Kamala Naganathan http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 72 74 10.5195/aa.2024.552 Digital Kinship: The Future Calling https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/550 Shivangi Patel Copyright (c) 2024 Shivangi Patel http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 75 81 10.5195/aa.2024.550 Technologized Intimacies and Posthuman Kinship Across the Life Course https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/553 Sayendri Panchadhyayi Copyright (c) 2024 Sayendri Panchadhyayi http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 82 89 10.5195/aa.2024.553 Doing Futures-Anthropology Research in Visions of Aging Technology https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/554 Miguel Gomez-Hernandez Copyright (c) 2024 Miguel Gomez-Hernandez http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 90 95 10.5195/aa.2024.554 Navigating Mediated Kinship and Care in Our Aging Futures https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/549 Jacob Sheahan Copyright (c) 2024 Jacob Sheahan http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 96 100 10.5195/aa.2024.549 Rethinking Intergenerational Living as the Ideal Form of Senior Care: Life Course Research with Immigrant Families in Toronto https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/504 <p>Canada’s care systems are ill-equipped to support its aging population, and this crisis intertwines with an acute shortage of affordable housing. Immigrants to Canada have a higher propensity to cohabitate multi-generationally, an arrangement that is sometimes romanticized as an ideal form of senior care. This article contributes to scholarship exploring intergenerational cohabitation as a practice of care, using life course research to consider how class and migration timing shape experiences of intergenerational living and senior care. Based on 19 in-depth interviews with immigrant seniors from Latin America and the Caribbean (n=10) and family caregivers (n=9) living in the Greater Toronto Area, this study uncovers two central findings. First, intergenerational living should not be viewed as an ideal form of senior care since (1a) some seniors resist intergenerational living, preferring independence and downtown residence nearer to culturally relevant communities and (1b) cohabitation does not always provide sufficient or better care. Second, access to smooth multigenerational cohabitation is inequitable, as housing arrangements are structured by class and migration timing, with middle-class families who have been in Canada longer facing fewer barriers to positive experiences of intergenerational living, compared to more recent migrants with lower incomes. This article challenges culturally essentializing assumptions about immigrant intergenerational cohabitation and argues that access to affordable housing is a senior care issue.</p> Alexa Carson Copyright (c) 2024 Alexa Carson http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 3 23 10.5195/aa.2024.504 Narratives of Personhood and Caregiving in Ontario Long-Term Care Homes During COVID-19 https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/486 <p>Drawing on narratives recorded from family members of residents in long-term care homes in Ontario, Canada, during the 2020 COVID-19 lockdown, in this paper, I present a two-pronged argument. First, following Taylor (2008) and Seaman (2018, 2020) I suggest that family caregiving for residents of long-term care homes helps to sustain residents’ personhood: the recognition of their identity as an ongoing participant in their social universe. The second part of my argument is that caregiving is a multifaceted and paradoxical endeavour. While caregiving can be a transformative and reciprocal practice of self-actualization (cf. Kleinman 2012; Kleinman and van der Geest 2009), at times it can also be troubled, ambivalent, and stressful (Cook and Trumble 2020). At its best, caregiving is a two-way street, enabling the maintenance of personhood for the care recipient, and validating the caregiver’s sense of ‘moral agency,’ or what medical anthropologist Neely Myers (2015, 13) defines as the capacity to be recognized in one’s local sphere as a good person who can make intimate connections to others. When caregiving goes awry, however, it leads to frustration, despair, and a sense of moral failure for the caregiver. For the care recipient, non-recognition and the loss of personhood can lead to social death and may also hasten physical decline. I conclude that for both professional and family caregivers of long-term care residents, systemic improvement of social and material support is needed to mitigate the challenges inherent in the recognition of personhood in caregiving relationships.</p> Ellen Badone Copyright (c) 2024 Ellen Badone http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 24 36 10.5195/aa.2024.486 Growing Old in the City: Challenges of Access to and Control of Urban Houses among Older Women in Low-income Suburbs of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/447 <p>This study addresses the struggles for housing among older women, including the meaning attached to ownership and control of urban houses among low-income households. It analyses the extent to which older women in low-income suburbs of Bulawayo, Zimbabwe, can age-in-place. I explain how the ideal of ageing in place for the nineteen women in this research (ages 60 – 90) is dependent on factors such as access to and control of one’s housing situation, which are impacted by whether or not they have good sibling and intergenerational family relationships. Family conflicts and unpleasant interactions with siblings, adult children, nephews, nieces, and grandchildren affect their chances of ageing well in their place of choice forcing some of them to begrudgingly retrace their steps back to the rural areas. These older women are poor and do not have reliable sources of income to look after themselves and the children under their care.</p> Chipo Hungwe Copyright (c) 2024 Chipo Hungwe http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 37 49 10.5195/aa.2024.447 The Collateral Damage of Policy Reform: Low-Income Women Retirees, State Feminism, and the Pension System in Sweden https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/500 <p>In 2014, the Swedish government declared itself the first feminist government in the world. Indeed, the country has been successful in promoting gender equality, yet many retired women, particularly in rural areas, live on an income below the EU poverty line. Based on analysis of Sweden’s pension system, the country’s commitment to gender equality, and interviews with low-income women pensioners in rural Sweden, this article explores why some women end up living in poverty in later life. The article demonstrates how the Swedish pension reform of the 1990s has generated a structural lag; today’s older women have lived during times that were radically different from the world nowadays, yet their pensions are based on forward-looking ideals. Consequently, today’s older women have become “collateral damage” (Bauman 2011) of securing a new form of pension system, and seemingly also neglected in the state’s promise of ensuring gender equality. </p> Anna Gustafsson Copyright (c) 2024 Anna Gustafsson http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 50 64 10.5195/aa.2024.500 From the Editor-in-Chief https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/546 Manonita Ghosh Copyright (c) 2024 Manonita Ghosh http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 1 2 10.5195/aa.2024.546 Book Review: Calling Family: Digital Technologies and the Making of Transnational Care Collectives https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/528 Michele Gamburd Copyright (c) 2024 Michele Gamburd http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 101 103 10.5195/aa.2024.528 Film Review: Half Elf https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/527 Alyssa Erspamer Copyright (c) 2024 Alyssa Erspamer http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 104 106 10.5195/aa.2024.527 Book Review: Gender and Age/Aging in Popular Culture: Representations in Film, Music, Literature, and Social Media https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/526 Femke De Sutter Copyright (c) 2024 Femke De Sutter http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 107 109 10.5195/aa.2024.526 Book Review: Collaborative Happiness: Building the Good Life in Urban Cohousing Communities https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/529 Alin Constantin Ionescu Copyright (c) 2024 Alin Constantin Ionescu http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 110 112 10.5195/aa.2024.529 Film Review: Death of the One Who Knows https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/530 Fotarisman Zaluchu Vicky Rifai Adriansyah Copyright (c) 2024 Fotarisman Zaluchu http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 113 115 10.5195/aa.2024.530 Book Review: Ageing with Smartphones in Uganda Togetherness in The Dotcom Age https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/533 Masha Hassan Copyright (c) 2024 Masha Hassan http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 116 118 10.5195/aa.2024.533 Book Review: Late-Life Homelessness: Experiences of Disadvantage and Unequal Aging https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/506 Irene Glasser Copyright (c) 2024 Irene Glasser http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 119 120 10.5195/aa.2024.506 Book Review: Contemporary Narratives of Ageing, Illness, Care https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/539 Giulia De Togni Copyright (c) 2024 Julia De Togni http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 121 123 10.5195/aa.2024.539 Book Review: Troubling Inheritances: Memory, Music and Aging https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/538 Shreyasi Singh Copyright (c) 2024 Shreyasi Singh http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 124 126 10.5195/aa.2024.538 Book Review: Migration, Diversity and Inequality in Later Life: Ageing at a Crossroad https://anthro-age.pitt.edu/ojs/anthro-age/article/view/537 Harchand Ram Copyright (c) 2024 Harchand Ram http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 2024-10-21 2024-10-21 45 2 127 129 10.5195/aa.2024.537