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Other Ways of Growing Old - Anthropological Perspectives (Paperback)
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Other Ways of Growing Old - Anthropological Perspectives (Paperback)
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As anthropologists, we offer this book about aging in a wide
variety of human societies in the hope of its making three
contributions. First, this book will help to remedy a massive
neglect of old age by the discipline of anthropology. The
pioneering work of Leo Simmons (1945) has remained a lonely
monument since the 1940's, for despite recent interest in the
subject of aging in modern Western societies on the part of social
gerontologists and sociologists, little has been done by
anthropologists on aging in non-Western societies. Where it has
been treated at all, it has been in the form either of a few final
paragraphs in the discussion of the life cycle or of a simple
ethnographic fact among other facts about a certain social system.
What has been missing has been any attempt to put aging in a
cross-cultural or comparative perspective, to give this vital
subject the same treatment that has been accorded marriage, for
example, or death or inheritance or sex roles.
Second, this book will bring a needed cross-cultural perspective to
the study of social gerontology. The recent explosion of interest
in this field has been largely confined to the study of aging in
North America and Europe. But we anthropologists feel that such a
culturally limited study, though interesting and productive in its
own right, is dangerously narrow if it does not consider what aging
is like in other societies. What aspects of aging, for example, are
human universals and have to be planned for as inevitable, and what
aspects are cultural particulars and can be avoided, modified, or
strengthened under certain social conditions? By presenting both a
biological account of the universals of human aging (Weiss), and
specific ethnographic accounts of aging in a wide variety of
societies, we believe we can help to put North American aging into
perspective
Third, we hope this book will serve as an illustration of a
particular anthropological approach to unity and diversity in human
societies and cultures. Perhaps the main task of sociocultural
anthropology is a twofold one: the explanation of cross-cultural
universals, somehow rooted either in the biological nature of the
human species or in universal imperatives of social organization,
and the explanation of intercultural variations, rooted in a
dialectical interaction between culture and the material conditions
(partially created by culture) in which it exists. If unity and
diversity can indeed be explained in this way, the cross-cultural
study of aging can serve as a paradigm. By first setting out what
seem to be the universals determined by the biology of the human
species, and by then exploring the range of variation in cultural
solutions, we ought to be able to formulate a set of principles
that will allow us to explain why variations occur in a certain
way. Nine ethnographic case studies are enough, we believe, to
enable us to formulate some preliminary hypotheses about the nature
and causes of variation in the social process of aging.
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