A Captive, a Wreck, a Piece of Dirt: Aging Anxieties Embodied in Older People With a Death Wish
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| Publication date | 12-2019 |
| Journal | OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying |
| Volume | Issue number | 80 | 2 |
| Pages (from-to) | 245-265 |
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| Abstract |
The aims of this present study were to explore the use and meaning of metaphors and images about aging in older people with a death wish and to elucidate what these metaphors and images tell us about their self-understanding and imagined feared future. Twenty-five in-depth interviews with Dutch older people with a death wish (median 82 years) were analyzed by making use of a phenomenological–hermeneutical metaphor analysis approach. We found 10 central metaphorical concepts: (a) struggle, (b) victimhood, (c) void, (d) stagnation, (e) captivity, (f) breakdown, (g) redundancy, (h) subhumanization, (i) burden, and (j) childhood. It appears that the group under research does have profound negative impressions of old age and about themselves being or becoming old. The discourse used reveals a strong sense of distance, disengagement, and nonbelonging associated with their wish to die. This study empirically supports the theory of stereotype embodiment.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1177/0030222817732465 |
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