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Older adults' narratives about a flood disaster: Resilience, coherence, and personal identity
Authors:Robyn Tuohy  Christine Stephens
Institution:
  • School of Psychology, Te Kura Hinengaro Tangata, Massey University, Palmerston North, Aotearoa/New Zealand
  • Abstract:Older adults are a vulnerable group in a disaster and are more at risk of adverse effects as a result. This paper draws on the use of narrative theory in health and gerontology studies to examine how a disruptive disaster was storied. Narrative interviews were conducted with nine older adults aged over 65 years who had recently experienced a flood disaster. The participants' narratives about the disruptive event were integrated with past personal events that spanned more than seven decades. The disaster became a reference point for previous challenging experiences, which created biographical continuity, coherence and order over time. Furthermore, the disaster stories were about biography and identity, and showed how older adults made sense of the flood from a life-course perspective. The use of narrative approaches provides an insight into how the flood disaster was experienced, and reveals how four older adults storied their experiences of a significant life challenge.
    Keywords:Flood  Disaster  Identity  Biography  Older adults  Disruption  Narrative  Ageing  Resilience
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