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Narratives and self-identity in later life: Two rural American older women
Authors:Dena Shenk   Boyd Davis   James R. Peacock  Linda Moore
Affiliation:Gerontology Program, University of North Carolina at Charlotte, 9201 University City Boulevard, Charlotte, NC 28223-0001, USA
Abstract:
Older adults often draw on memories to construct stories about themselves that help them to retain and validate their self-identities, doing this within the cultural contexts that have shaped their lives. In this paper, we examine the life history narratives of two working class, rural American older women and the ways in which those narratives are similar despite one major difference: one has dementia. In both cases, major themes that are consistent with gender-based, working class, rural American cultural values are dominant, including closeness of family, hard work, ties to the land, and religious faith. In the first case, she reconstructs memories of her life in accordance with dominant cultural and personal values, downplaying the ways in which her experiences were “out of step” with these values. In the second case, her sense of identity remains and is expressed through her co-constructed memories although she is experiencing cognitive loss.
Keywords:Older women   Rural aging   Dementia   Lifecourse
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