Activist ageing

In the field of ageing studies, activist ageing refers to activism and research that empowers the elderly. This approach investigates how ageing is imagined (in mostly Western societies), how ageism operates, and how elders respond to exclusion.[1][2]

RECAA Flashmob Montreal

Many elders, and especially women, are involved in organizations that aim to effect social change on issues related to ageing or in general.[3] Retirement engenders a form of social exclusion. In this context becoming an activist or a volunteer represents one's agency and participation in social change, outside the market system. Instead of assuming a passive role, they act. As elder rights activists and members of community organizations, they try to prevent elder abuse, raise awareness, build resources and networks.[4] Activist ageing is different from active ageing.

Organizations

Mediatization

Canadian governmental services offered through various Internet portals require greater technological skills from the part of elders, who need to comply in order to get information about their rights or specific programs.[5] The development of digital technologies forces activists and community organizations to consider including media in their actions. Many organizations use digital technologies to contact other organizations at a distance, to document their organization’s history and actions, and to develop intergenerational ties. Contrary to popular discourses that represent the elderly as passive and dependant, their uses of digital media show their agency and ability to produce media content.[6] Other kinds of projects also aim to enhance digital literacy among elders, such as the workshops taking place at the Atwater Library in Montreal.[7]

See also

Elder rights

References

  1. Gullette, M. (2004). Aged by culture. Chicago IL: University of Chicago Press.
  2. Sawchuk, K. (2013). “Tactical Mediatization and Activist Ageing: pressures, pushbacks and the story of RECAA,” in MediKulture special issue on mediatization edited by Stig Hjarvard and Line Nybro Peterson.
  3. Charpentier, Michèle, Anne Quéniart et Julie Jacques (2008). Femmes, militance et vieillissement. Amnis 8 : http://amnis.revues.org/583 ; DOI : 10.4000/amnis.583
  4. Sawchuk, K. (2013). “Tactical Mediatization and Activist Ageing: pressures, pushbacks and the story of RECAA,” in MediKulture special issue on mediatization edited by Stig Hjarvard and Line Nybro Peterson.
  5. Middleton, C. & Sorensen, C. (2005). How connected Are Canadians ? Inequities in Canadian households’ Internet access. Canadian Journal of Communication, 30(4): 463-483.
  6. Sawchuk, K. (2013). “Tactical Mediatization and Activist Ageing: pressures, pushbacks and the story of RECAA,” in MediKulture special issue on mediatization edited by Stig Hjarvard and Line Nybro Peterson.
  7. http://digital-literacy.atwaterlibrary.ca/?p=1061&upm_export=pdf
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