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Age and Aging

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Social Factors in the Aging Process: Menopausal Women Stereotyped as unable to control their emotions and prone to irritability and depression. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Age and Aging


1
Chapter 14
  • Age and Aging

2
Chapter Outline
  • The Social Significance of Aging
  • A Society Grows Old
  • Growing Up/Growing Old Aging and the Life Course
  • Death and Dying
  • Age, Diversity, and Inequality
  • Explaining Age Stratification

3
Social Significance of Aging
  • All societies practice age differentiation.
  • Age stratification is the hierarchical ranking of
    different age groups in society.
  • The age structure of the United States is rapidly
    changing, with a greater proportion of the
    population consisting of old people.

4
 Physical Process of Aging
  • The effects of aging depend on biological,
    social, and environmental factors.
  • Short-term memory becomes less accurate, but
    long-term memory becomes more accurate.
  • Artistic abilities have been known to develop in
    later life.

5
Social Factors in the Aging Process Menopausal
Women
  • Stereotyped as unable to control their emotions
    and prone to irritability and depression.
  • Evidence supports that menopause is not related
    to serious depression and that the majority of
    women are happy about the loss of ovulation
    ability.
  • Studies also find that a majority of menopausal
    women do not experience hot flashes and other
    physical symptoms associated with menopause.

6
Life Expectancy
  • Probable number of years a particular group is
    likely to live, given statistical patterns.
  • Based on the age at which half the people born in
    a particular year die.
  • Shaped by social factors gender, race, and
    social class.

7
Age Stereotypes
  • Both the elderly and youth are burdened by
    negative stereotypes.
  • Studies find adults perceive teenagers as
    irresponsible,lazy, sloppy, etc.
  • Studies find the elderly are perceived as senile,
    meddlesome, conservative, inactive, unproductive,
    lonely, and uninterested in sex.
  • Older women are perceived as having lost their
    sexual appeal, contrary to older men who are
    dashing.

8
 Life Course Perspective
  • Within each generation, life events shape the
    sociological experience of age groups
  • Childhood
  • Youth and adolescence
  • Adulthood
  • Old age

9
 Childhood
  • The image of a childhood as carefree is not the
    reality for many children
  • 1/4 of those living in shelters are children.
  • 26 of children live in poverty.
  • As many as 16 of girls under age 18 experience
    sexual abuse.

10
Youth and Adolescence
  • Until the 20th century, children moved directly
    into adult roles, there was no adolescence.
  • Establishing an identity is the central concern
    of this life stage.
  • Special vocabularies and manners of speaking
    define independence from adults.

11
 Adulthood
  • Carries more responsibility, rights and
    privileges than any other stage in the life
    cycle.
  • The economic and social resources one has
    influences how one experiences each phase of
    adulthood, including mid-life.

12
 Retirement
  • Maintaining social contacts from work and
    elsewhere eases the burdens of retirement.
  • Taking on a job when retired creates social
    networks, which is linked to better health.
  • Most pension systems discriminate against women
    who have on average lower lifetime earnings.

13
Old Age
  • The majority of men and women remain sexually
    active well into their 70s and 80s.
  • The majority of the elderly adjust well to
    changes.
  • Only about 10 of the elderly become senile.
  • One of the most difficult adjustments of old age
    is widowhood.

14
Theoretical Perspectives on Age Stratification
  • Functionalism sees both youth and elderly as less
    useful or functional for society.
  • Disengagement theory predicts that as people age,
    they withdraw from society and are relieved of
    responsibilities.

15
Theoretical Perspectives on Age Stratification
  • Conflict theory sees ageism as eliminating youth
    and the elderly from competition over scarce
    resources.
  • Symbolic interaction theory sees youth and the
    elderly as infantilized via cultural symbols,
    such as language and popular culture.
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