The Raging Grannies: Understanding the Role of Activism in the Lives of Older Women

Guided by feminist gerontology, this qualitative study explored the role of activism in the lives of older women. More specifically, it examined the involvement of older women in one particular group of activists, the Raging Grannies. Of particular interest was to understand the experience of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Caissie, Linda
Language:en
Published: University of Waterloo 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2802
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-OWTU.10012-28022014-06-18T03:51:13Z The Raging Grannies: Understanding the Role of Activism in the Lives of Older Women Caissie, Linda Sociology Leisure Recreation & Tourism General Social Sciences older women activism social movements qualitative research feminist gerontology Guided by feminist gerontology, this qualitative study explored the role of activism in the lives of older women. More specifically, it examined the involvement of older women in one particular group of activists, the Raging Grannies. Of particular interest was to understand the experience of how and why older women become involved in activism. This study was collaborative in nature, with in-depth active interviews as the primary method of data collection. In total 15 women participated in face-to-face interviews, with five women contributing to the study in an on-line Raging Grannies forum. Participants were located in Ontario, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. The findings demonstrated that these women, who used non-violent, creative methods of protest, challenged the traditional views of growing older. Through their activism, the Raging Grannies also created community. Although the Raging Grannies did not define their experience as leisure, they described their experience as "fun" but rewarding work. The intent of this research was to contribute to the literature on ageing and leisure while giving the opportunity for older women to share their stories. Emergent theory suggests that activism for these women represented the application or expression of shared life experiences which are unique to women. The Raging Grannies provided the space for the study participants to express their collective life experiences, particularly in the context of shared concerns around a more just, fair and sustainable society. 2007-05-08T13:36:20Z 2007-05-08T13:36:20Z 2006 2006 Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2802 en Copyright: 2006, Caissie, Linda. All rights reserved. University of Waterloo
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Sociology
Leisure
Recreation & Tourism
General Social Sciences
older women
activism
social movements
qualitative research
feminist gerontology
spellingShingle Sociology
Leisure
Recreation & Tourism
General Social Sciences
older women
activism
social movements
qualitative research
feminist gerontology
Caissie, Linda
The Raging Grannies: Understanding the Role of Activism in the Lives of Older Women
description Guided by feminist gerontology, this qualitative study explored the role of activism in the lives of older women. More specifically, it examined the involvement of older women in one particular group of activists, the Raging Grannies. Of particular interest was to understand the experience of how and why older women become involved in activism. This study was collaborative in nature, with in-depth active interviews as the primary method of data collection. In total 15 women participated in face-to-face interviews, with five women contributing to the study in an on-line Raging Grannies forum. Participants were located in Ontario, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. The findings demonstrated that these women, who used non-violent, creative methods of protest, challenged the traditional views of growing older. Through their activism, the Raging Grannies also created community. Although the Raging Grannies did not define their experience as leisure, they described their experience as "fun" but rewarding work. The intent of this research was to contribute to the literature on ageing and leisure while giving the opportunity for older women to share their stories. Emergent theory suggests that activism for these women represented the application or expression of shared life experiences which are unique to women. The Raging Grannies provided the space for the study participants to express their collective life experiences, particularly in the context of shared concerns around a more just, fair and sustainable society.
author Caissie, Linda
author_facet Caissie, Linda
author_sort Caissie, Linda
title The Raging Grannies: Understanding the Role of Activism in the Lives of Older Women
title_short The Raging Grannies: Understanding the Role of Activism in the Lives of Older Women
title_full The Raging Grannies: Understanding the Role of Activism in the Lives of Older Women
title_fullStr The Raging Grannies: Understanding the Role of Activism in the Lives of Older Women
title_full_unstemmed The Raging Grannies: Understanding the Role of Activism in the Lives of Older Women
title_sort raging grannies: understanding the role of activism in the lives of older women
publisher University of Waterloo
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2802
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