Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-qsmjn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T10:02:10.179Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Women are just more active’ – gender as a determining factor in involvement in senior centres

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 April 2013

JAROSLAVA HASMANOVÁ MARHÁNKOVÁ*
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, University of West Bohemia, Pilsen, Czech Republic.
*
Address for correspondence: Jaroslava Hasmanová Marhánková, Department of Sociology, University of West Bohemia, Univerzitní 8, 306 14 Pilsen, Czech Republic. E-mail: jmarhan@kss.zcu.cz

Abstract

Centres for seniors offering leisure-time activities currently represent significant actors that translate the idea of active ageing into a particular approach to seniors. Despite the fact that active ageing is now represented by the state and providers of social services as the universally desirable way of ageing, the significantly smaller numbers of male clients was identified as a marked feature of such organisations. A three-year ethnographic study was conducted at two centres in the Czech Republic which offer seniors-only leisure-time activities strongly grounded in the idea of active ageing. The method of participant observation was used, and 47 in-depth interviews were conducted with the centres' clients and employees. The higher participation by women in the centres and the role they attribute to such organisations in their lives is analysed in the context of their previous gendered biographies. Gender patterns embedded in the way daily activities at the senior centres are organised, as well as in the idea of active ageing itself, are highlighted. Despite the seeming invisibility of gender as a principle that structures the way these centres are run, they are in fact gendered organisations, where gender emerges as a basic principle affecting the chances of participating in active ageing as presented by the centres.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2013 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Acker, J. 1990. Hierarchies, jobs, bodies. A theory of gendered organization. Gender and Society, 4, 2, 139–58.Google Scholar
Aday, R. H., Kehoe, G. C. and Farnex, L. A. 2006. Impact of senior center friendships on aging women who live alone. Journal of Women & Aging, 18, 1, 5773.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Agahi, N. and Parker, G. 2008. Leisure activities and mortality. Journal of Aging and Health, 20, 7, 855–71.Google Scholar
Arber, S., Perren, K. and Davidson, K. 2002. Involvement in social organizations in later life: variations by gender and class. In Andersson, L. (ed.), Cultural Gerontology. Greenwood Publishing Group, Westport, Connecticut, 7793.Google Scholar
Avramov, D. and Mašková, M. 2003. Active ageing in Europe – Volume 1. Population Studies, 41, 1, 1152.Google Scholar
Bartky, S. L. 1988. Foucault, femininity and the modernization of patriarchal power. In Diamond, I. and Quinby, L. (eds), Feminism and Foucault. Reflection and Resistance. Northeastern University Press, Boston, 6183.Google Scholar
Beisgen, B. and Kraitchman, M. 2003. Senior Centers: Opportunities for Successful Aging. Springer Publishing Company, New York.Google Scholar
Biggs, S. 2001. Towards critical narrativity. Stories of aging in contemporary social policy. Journal of Aging Studies, 15, 4, 303–16.Google Scholar
Bordo, S. 1993. Unbearable Weight. University of California Press, Berkeley, California.Google Scholar
Boudiny, K. 2012. ‘Active ageing’: from empty rhetoric to effective policy tool. Ageing & Society. Published online 10.7.2012, doi:10.1017/S0144686X1200030X.Google Scholar
Bourdieu, P. 1998. Masculine Domination. Stanford University Press, Stanford, California.Google Scholar
Britton, D. 2000. The epistemology of the gendered organization. Gender and Society, 14, 3, 418–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bury, M. 1995. Ageing, gender and sociological theory. In Arber, S. and Ginn, J. (eds), Connecting Gender and Ageing. Open University Press, Buckingham, UK, 1530.Google Scholar
Calasanti, T. and King, N. 2005. Firming the floppy penis. Age, class and gender relations in the lives of old men. Men and Masculinities, 8, 1, 323.Google Scholar
Cardona, B. 2008. ‘Healthy ageing’ policies and anti-ageing ideologies and practices: on the exercise of responsibility. Medical Health Care and Philosophy, 11, 4, 475–83.Google Scholar
Cusack, S. A. 1994. Developing leadership in the third age: an ethnographic study of leadership in a seniors' center. Journal of Applied Gerontology, 13, 2, 127–42.Google Scholar
ČSÚ 2011. Statistická ročenka České republiky 2011. Praha: Český statistický úřad. Available online at http://www.czso.cz/csu/2011edicniplan.nsf/kapitola/0001-11-2010-0400 [Accessed 27 July 2012].Google Scholar
ČSÚ 2012. Senioři v mezinárodním srovnání. Praha: Český statistický úřad. Available online at http://www.czso.cz/csu/2012edicniplan.nsf/publ/1417-12-n_2012 [Accessed 25 June 2012].Google Scholar
Davidson, K., Daly, T. and Arber, S. 2003. Older men, social integration and organizational activities. Social Policy & Society, 2, 2, 81–9.Google Scholar
Emerson, R. M., Fretz, R. I. and Shaw, L. L. 1995. Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Everingham, C., Warner-Smith, P. and Byles, J. 2007. Transforming retirement: re-thinking models of retirement to accommodate the experience of women. Women's Studies International Forum, 30, 6, 512–22.Google Scholar
Ezzy, D. 2002. Qualitative Analysis. Practice and Innovation. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Gilleard, C. and Higgs, P. 2000. Cultures of Ageing. Self, Citizenship and the Body. Pearson Education, Harlow, UK.Google Scholar
Hasmanová Marhánková, J. 2010. Konstruování představ aktivního stárnutí v centrech pro seniory. Sociologický časopis/Czech Sociological Review, 46, 2, 211–34.Google Scholar
Hasmanová Marhánková, J. 2011. Leisure in old age – disciplinary practices surrounding the discourse of active ageing. International Journal of Ageing and Later Life, 6, 1, 532.Google Scholar
Hendricks, J. and Hatch, L. R. 2006. Lifestyle and aging. In Binstock, R. H. and George, L. K. (eds), Handbook of Aging and the Social Science. Sixth edition, Academic Press, London, 301–20.Google Scholar
Hepworth, M. 1995. Positive ageing. What is the message? In Bunton, R., Nettleton, S. and Burrows, R. (eds), The Sociology of Health Promotion: Critical Analysis of Consumption, Lifestyle and Risk. Routledge, London, 176–90.Google Scholar
Higgs, P. and Jones, I. R. 2009. Medical Sociology and Old Age. Towards a Sociology of Health in Later Life. Routledge, London.Google Scholar
Holstein, M. B. and Minkler, M. 2003. Self, society and the ‘new gerontology’. The Gerontologist, 43, 6, 787–96.Google Scholar
Hurd, L. C. 1999. ‘We're not old!’: older women's negotiation of aging and oldness. Journal of Ageing Studies, 13, 4, 419–39.Google Scholar
Jolanki, O. 2008. Discussing responsibility and ways of influencing health. International Journal of Ageing and Later Life, 3, 1, 4576.Google Scholar
Jones, I. R., Hyde, M., Victor, C. R., Wiggins, R. D., Gilleard, C. and Higgs, P. 2008. The Evolution of the third age. In Jones, I. R., Hyde, M., Victor, C. R., Wiggins, R. D., Gilleard, C. and Higgs, P. (eds), Ageing in a Consumer Society. From Passive to Active Consumption in Britain. Polity Press, Bristol, UK, 1329.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kanter, R. M. 1993. Men and Women of the Corporation. Basic Books, New York.Google Scholar
Katz, S. 2000. Busy bodies: activity, ageing and the management of the everyday life. Journal of Ageing Studies, 14, 2, 135–52.Google Scholar
Krout, J. A., Cutler, S. and Coward, R. T. 1990. Correlates of senior center participation: a national analysis. The Gerontologist, 30, 1, 72–9.Google Scholar
Lampinen, P., Heikkinen, R. L., Kauppinen, M. and Heikkinen, E. 2006. Activity as a predictor of mental well-being among older adults. Aging and Mental Health, 10, 5, 454–66.Google Scholar
Laslett, P. 1989. A Fresh Map of Life: The Emergence of the Third Age. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, London.Google Scholar
Lund, A. and Engelsrud, G. 2008. ‘I am not that old’: inter-personal experiences of thriving and threads at a senior centre. Ageing & Society, 28, 5, 675–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, E. 1991. The egg and the sperm: how science has constructed a romance based on stereotypical male–female roles. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 16, 3, 485501.Google Scholar
Moody, H. R. 2004. Structure and agency in the late-life learning. In Tulle, E. (ed.), Old Age and Agency. Nova Science Publishers, New York, 2943.Google Scholar
Neilson, B. 2006. Anti-ageing cultures, biopolitics and globalisation. Cultural Studies Review, 12, 2, 149–64.Google Scholar
Nimrod, G. 2008. In support of innovation theory: innovation in activity patterns and life satisfaction among recently retired individuals. Ageing & Society, 28, 6, 831–46.Google Scholar
Nimrod, G. and Adoni, H. 2006. Leisure-styles and life satisfaction among recent retirees in Israel. Ageing & Society, 26, 4, 607–30.Google Scholar
Pardasani, M. 2010. Senior centers: characteristics of participants and nonparticipants. Activities, Adaptation & Aging, 34, 1, 4870.Google Scholar
Perren, K., Arber, S. and Davidson, K. 2003. Men's organizational affiliations in later life: the influence of social class and marital status on informal membership. Ageing & Society, 23, 1, 6982.Google Scholar
Ralston, P. A. 1991. Determinants of senior center attendance and participation. Journal of Applied Gerontology, 10, 3, 258–73.Google Scholar
Rudman, D. L. 2006. Shaping the active, autonomous and responsible retiree: an analysis of discursive technologies and their links with neo-liberal political rationality. Ageing & Society, 26, 2, 181201.Google Scholar
Russell, C. 2007. What do older women and men want? Gender differences in the ‘lived’ experience of ageing. Current Sociology, 55, 2, 173–92.Google Scholar
Scherger, S., Nazroo, J. and Higgs, P. 2011. Leisure activities and retirement: do structures of inequality change in old age? Ageing & Society, 31, 1, 146–72.Google Scholar
Strain, L. A. 2001. Senior centres: who participates? Canadian Journal on Aging, 20, 4, 471–92.Google Scholar
Thompson, P. 1992. ‘I don't feel old’: subjective aging and the search for meaning in later life. Ageing & Society, 12, 1, 2347.Google Scholar
Young, I. M. 2005. On Female Body Experience: ‘Throwing Like a Girl’ and Other Essays. Oxford University Press, Oxford.Google Scholar