4.2 Article

Doing change and continuity: age identity and the micro-macro divide

Journal

AGEING & SOCIETY
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages 863-881

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0144686X09008873

Keywords

age identity; baby-boom cohort; provisional continuity device; discursive gerontology; micro and macro; microfication

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This paper is a study of the discursive management of notions of change and continuity in interview talk. It presents selected short empirical examples from interviews with 22 Finnish baby-boomers, and discusses the methodological and theoretical issues that arise. Following a review of the major approaches to the study of age identity, the analytic intersection between qualitative gerontology and discursive psychology is explored. The analysis identifies how the frequent use of a 'provisional continuity device' enables speakers simultaneously both to acknowledge and to distance themselves from factual notions of physical dis-psychological lifespan change. The key methodological argument is that the discursive analysis of age-in-interaction cannot necessarily be achieved through the myopic micro-study of discursive strategies, but rather two suggestions are made. First, it is argued that analytically-anchored and rigorous discursive gerontology that both systematically draws on and contributes to the broad field or discursive research provides a means by which to test empirically post-modern conceptualisations of age identity. Second, it is suggested that analyses of age-talk in everyday and institutional settings provide an analytical and theoretical middle-ground between the macro versus micro or 'microfication' debate in gerontology.

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