The Shady Side of Fifty
Age and Old Age in Late Victorian Canada and the United States
- Publisher
- McGill-Queen's University Press
- Initial publish date
- Mar 2008
- Category
- General, General
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780773533233
- Publish Date
- Mar 2008
- List Price
- $125.00
-
eBook
- ISBN
- 9780773578494
- Publish Date
- Mar 2008
- List Price
- $95.00
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Description
Concerns about aging, old age security, and intergenerational relations existed long before youth culture and falling fertility became such popular media topics. Lisa Dillon uses an examination of the censuses of Canada and the U.S. to break new ground by integrating statistical analyses of the historical data with a discourse analysis of ideas about age and old age. In The Shady Side of Fifty she explores the psychological, social, and economic dimensions of aging during a period of socio-economic and demographic change that mirrors the present day. Dillon uses the census as both a qualitative document and a source of quantitative data and also draws on diaries and letters to show how subtle shifts in the living arrangements of the elderly, decreasing intergenerational interdependence, and the advent of retirement and the empty nest changed the trajectory of old age during 1870-1901. The Shady Side of Fifty analyses these social shifts to reveal two different kinds of age anxiety: facing a new decade and dealing with extreme old age.
About the author
Lisa Dillon is associate professor, département de démographie, Université de Montréal.
Editorial Reviews
"[The Shady Side of Fifty] is a wide-ranging and impressive study circumscribing the meanings of old age and aging in late Victorian Canada and the United States. Using discourse analysis and strong quantitative methodology, including logistic regressions
"This work suggests a fresh, new approach to the study of old age and demography in North America. Dillon takes on the censuses and historiographic literature of both Canada and the United States to more fully inform our knowledge of the continental society as well as the two discrete national societies." James Snell, History, University of Guelph