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The task of time in retirement
Author(s)David J Ekerdt, Catheryn Koss
Journal titleAgeing and Society, vol 36, no 6, July 2016
PublisherCambridge University Press, July 2016
Pagespp 1295-1311
Sourcejournals.cambridge.org/aso
KeywordsRetirement ; Activities of older people ; Recreation ; Living patterns ; Qualitative Studies ; United States of America.
AnnotationRetirees' encounter with time has long interested social scientists, especially the negotiation of such an open-ended status. Pursuing theoretical suggestions that daily activities anchor a narrative of self-identity, this project examined the coherence of retirees' representations of their time use. Information is drawn from interviews with 30 retirees in the Midwestern United States of America who were invited to discuss their daily lives and activities. The retirees valued time sovereignty and accounted for their time use by describing schedules of activities in some detail. Daily time was not presented as improvised but rather as structured into routines. Recurring behaviours flowed from situations and structures in which people were implicated, such as body care and living with others. Even in replies to a specific question about the preceding day, people slipped into language about what they typically do. Retirees' ready narratives about routines were also accounts of who they are not. The findings suggest, first, that daily routines are instrumental for retirees in economising thought and behaviour. Second, the assertion of a routine is an assurance that one's life is ordered and proceeds with purpose, thus solving the task of time. Third, routines can be a means to signal conformity with ideals of active ageing. (RH).
Accession NumberCPA-160617208 A
ClassmarkG3: G: H: K7: 3DP: 7T

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