Hannum Susan M, Black Helen K, Rubinstein Robert L, de Medeiros Kate
Cancer Epidemiology, Prevention, and Control Training Fellowship, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Center for Aging Studies, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD.
Gerontologist. 2017 Apr 1;57(2):171-178. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnv105.
This article presents a narrative-based case study about chronic illness and genetic uncertainty and their relationship to generativity throughout the life course. Our focus is a woman who experienced vision loss early in life and interpreted its impact on her generativity through present-day biographical rescripting.
The case we present was chosen from the study "Generativity and Lifestyles of Older Women," which explored life history, social relations, and forms of generativity in an ethnographic interview format with 200 older women.
In constructing a present-day identity, the informant used shifting and conflicted self-constructions to produce a self-image as generative. Three critical themes emerged in understanding her life course: (a) retrospective interpretations of autonomy; (b) renegotiating control in the present, and (c) generativity across the life course.
This article contributes an understanding of childlessness as observed through the lenses of chronic illness, autonomy, and generativity. We conclude that a history of chronic illness, as it is co-occurring with internal debates about the meaning of key life events, may influence older adults' present-day identity. Implications for later life care needs are discussed.
本文呈现了一个基于叙事的关于慢性病与基因不确定性及其在整个生命历程中与繁衍力关系的案例研究。我们关注的是一位早年经历视力丧失并通过当下的人生传记改写来诠释其对自身繁衍力影响的女性。
我们呈现的案例选自“老年女性的繁衍力与生活方式”研究,该研究以人种志访谈的形式,对200名老年女性的生活史、社会关系和繁衍力形式进行了探索。
在构建当下身份时,受访者运用了不断变化且相互冲突的自我建构方式,塑造出一个具有繁衍力的自我形象。在理解她的生命历程时出现了三个关键主题:(a)对自主性的回顾性解读;(b)在当下重新协商控制权;(c)贯穿生命历程的繁衍力。
本文有助于从慢性病、自主性和繁衍力的视角理解无子女现象。我们得出结论,慢性病史与关于关键人生事件意义的内心辩论同时出现时,可能会影响老年人当下的身份认同。文中还讨论了对晚年护理需求的启示。