Newton Nicky J, Baltys Izora H
Int J Aging Hum Dev. 2014;78(2):171-95. doi: 10.2190/AG.78.2.e.
Generativity, or providing for the next generation (Erikson, 1950), is usually associated with midlife, and related to parenting. However, the extent to which grandparenting or non-parenting are associated with generativity, especially within the context of race, is less well known. The current study uses narrative data from the Foley Longitudinal Study of Adulthood (FLSA; N = 150) to examine the relationship between generativity and parent status--parents, grandparents, as well as non-parents--in midlife African Americans and Whites. Responses to questions concerning future plans in Life Story narratives were coded for four subtypes of generative expression: general generativity, productive generativity, generative caring, and generative need to be needed; these subtypes of generativity were associated with parent status in different ways for middle-aged men and women of each race group. The findings highlight the importance of context, providing a glimpse of expressions of generativity at the intersection of parent status and race.
繁衍,即养育下一代(埃里克森,1950年),通常与中年相关,并与育儿有关。然而,在种族背景下,祖父母身份或非父母身份与繁衍之间的关联程度却鲜为人知。本研究使用来自福利成人纵向研究(FLSA;N = 150)的叙事数据,来考察中年非裔美国人和白人中繁衍与父母身份(父母、祖父母以及非父母)之间的关系。对生活故事叙事中有关未来计划问题的回答,被编码为繁衍表达的四种亚型:一般繁衍、生产性繁衍、繁衍关怀以及被需要的繁衍需求;这些繁衍亚型在每个种族群体的中年男性和女性中,与父母身份有着不同的关联方式。研究结果凸显了背景的重要性,让我们得以一窥在父母身份和种族交叉点上的繁衍表达。