A Captive, a Wreck, a Piece of Dirt: Aging Anxieties Embodied in Older People With a Death Wish

Authors
  • E. van Wijngaarden
  • C. Leget
  • A. Goossensen
  • R. Pool
Publication date 12-2019
Journal OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying
Volume | Issue number 80 | 2
Pages (from-to) 245-265
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
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.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1177/0030222817732465
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