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End Game : How Inequality Shapes Our Final Years
Hardback Edition: 1
Corey Abramson's portraits of seniors from diverse backgrounds offer an intimate look at aging as a stratified social process. They illustrate that disparities in wealth, access to health care, neighborhood conditions, and networks of friends and family shape how different people understand and adapt to the challenges of old age. Social Security and Medicare are helpful but insufficient to alleviate deep structural inequalities. Yet material disadvantages alone cannot explain why seniors respond to aging in different ways. Culture, in all its variations, plays a crucial role.
Abramson argues that studying the experience of aging is central to understanding inequality, in part because this segment of the population is rapidly growing. But there is another reason. The shared challenges of the elderlydeclining mobility and health, loss of loved ones and friendsaffect people across the socioeconomic spectrum, allowing for powerful ethnographic comparisons that are difficult to make earlier in life. The End Game makes clear that, despite the shared experiences of old age, inequality remains a powerful arbiter of who wins and who loses in American society.
Featured in the Autumn 2015 Social Work newsletter.
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Pages : 230
Publisher : Harvard University Press
Publication date : 2015-06-25
Subjects: Non-fiction, Social Sciences, Sociology, Age Groups: The Elderly, Social Discrimination & Inequality