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This book investigates the experiences of older people who remain at home with care. It examines the transition points for the important life changes faced by family members who take on a greater care-giving role.
The book draws on demographic analyses and qualitative fieldwork to explore the shift from independence to increasing dependence, and suggests that this transition constitutes movement into a new stage of life, that of an Age of Supported Independence. Applying the anthropological concept of rites of passage in their analysis, the authors focus on the changes in everyday living within the spatial environment of the home, the temporal organization of daily life, and the reshaping of relationships. They suggest that many older people as well as the family members who become carers remain in a state of liminality: unable to make sense of their new situation and experience and, despite assumptions that ageing-in-place sustains social connectedness, excluded from their communities.
This book examines the experiences of older people who remain at home with care. It discusses life changes faced by family members who take on a greater care-giving role, and suggests that this constitutes a new stage of life, an Age of Supported Independence.Introduction: Stake in the Ground.- Chapter 1: The Demographic and Policy Context of Supported Independence in Later Life.- Chapter 2: The Move from Independence.- Chapter 3: Space and Liminality.- Chapter 4: Temporality and Liminality.- Chapter 5: Relational Transitions.- Chapter 6: Seperation, Liminality and the Potential for Reconnections at Home with Care.- Chapter 7: Care Work and Reconnections.- Chapter 8: Reconnections - Supported Independence and Agency in FrailtyThis book present a compelling case for a shift in thinking about the stages of the Third Age. By building on the voices of the adults and caregivers who are living in thil£.
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