Relinquishing the Practices of a Lifetime: Observations on ageing, caring and literacies

This paper draws on ethnographic and case study data from a variety of sources to explore the changing social practices of literacy across the lifespan. It explores the new literacy demands that people encounter with age when dealing with life events in a range of social domains. These include incre...

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Main Author: Mary Hamilton
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: UTS ePRESS 2008-10-01
Series:Literacy and Numeracy Studies
Online Access:https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/lnj/article/view/1278
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spelling doaj-dc94504d805e47c4b2a778881007a6012020-11-24T21:07:58ZengUTS ePRESSLiteracy and Numeracy Studies1441-05591839-29032008-10-01162-110.5130/lns.v0i0.1278825Relinquishing the Practices of a Lifetime: Observations on ageing, caring and literaciesMary Hamilton0Lancaster UniversityThis paper draws on ethnographic and case study data from a variety of sources to explore the changing social practices of literacy across the lifespan. It explores the new literacy demands that people encounter with age when dealing with life events in a range of social domains. These include increased leisure; travel; changing family and peer relationships as a result of death and loss; issues of health and disability and accessing new technologies. It reveals how literacy is implicated in peoples' changing sense of time, place and history; how the older person’s identity as a literate actor may be interrupted by both institutional and informal processes of caring and their disengagement from spheres of activity that were previously central markers of their identity. Ageing thus involves both expansion and retreat from familiar literacy practices.https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/lnj/article/view/1278
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mary Hamilton
spellingShingle Mary Hamilton
Relinquishing the Practices of a Lifetime: Observations on ageing, caring and literacies
Literacy and Numeracy Studies
author_facet Mary Hamilton
author_sort Mary Hamilton
title Relinquishing the Practices of a Lifetime: Observations on ageing, caring and literacies
title_short Relinquishing the Practices of a Lifetime: Observations on ageing, caring and literacies
title_full Relinquishing the Practices of a Lifetime: Observations on ageing, caring and literacies
title_fullStr Relinquishing the Practices of a Lifetime: Observations on ageing, caring and literacies
title_full_unstemmed Relinquishing the Practices of a Lifetime: Observations on ageing, caring and literacies
title_sort relinquishing the practices of a lifetime: observations on ageing, caring and literacies
publisher UTS ePRESS
series Literacy and Numeracy Studies
issn 1441-0559
1839-2903
publishDate 2008-10-01
description This paper draws on ethnographic and case study data from a variety of sources to explore the changing social practices of literacy across the lifespan. It explores the new literacy demands that people encounter with age when dealing with life events in a range of social domains. These include increased leisure; travel; changing family and peer relationships as a result of death and loss; issues of health and disability and accessing new technologies. It reveals how literacy is implicated in peoples' changing sense of time, place and history; how the older person’s identity as a literate actor may be interrupted by both institutional and informal processes of caring and their disengagement from spheres of activity that were previously central markers of their identity. Ageing thus involves both expansion and retreat from familiar literacy practices.
url https://learning-analytics.info/journals/index.php/lnj/article/view/1278
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