Personalism as a Component of Old Age Identity
- 1 March 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Research on Aging
- Vol. 1 (1) , 37-63
- https://doi.org/10.1177/016402757911003
Abstract
The purpose of this research was threefold: (1) to extend a previously introduced general methodology for studying role identities to the specific instance of age; (2) to present a causal framework in which to analyze the determinants and consequences of this identity; and (3) to explore the reciprocal relationship between age identity and health problems. The Burke-Tully procedure for measuring self-in-role was used to construct the variable of old age identity. Determinants of this component of the self included race, sex, age, education, income, retirement, widowhood, and health. Loneliness and life satisfaction were treated as consequences of identity. Subjective health was seen as a special case which in part is determined by one's identity and which may also have a reciprocal effect on the identity. The data are from a national probability sample of 1,522 adults. Results showed that an old age identity was one of personalism which contained positive as well as negative elements and was primarily influenced by poor health, chronological age, income, and retirement, though the effects of each of these differed between subsamples. The causal structures for the subsamples of white males, black males, and black females were not significantly different from each other. In these subsamples old age identity had no effect on health while health influenced identity only indirectly through retirement. For white females, old age identity directly influenced and was influenced by health.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Measuring Responding Desirably with Attitude-Opinion ItemsSocial Psychology, 1978
- What Is a Cohort and Why?Human Development, 1978
- Attribution and Identity Construction: Some CommentsAmerican Sociological Review, 1977
- The Measurement of Role IdentitySocial Forces, 1977
- Generation and Family Effects in Value SocializationAmerican Sociological Review, 1975
- The Decomposition of Effects in Path AnalysisAmerican Sociological Review, 1975
- Aging and Cohort Succession: Interpretations and MisinterpretationsPublic Opinion Quarterly, 1973
- Perceptions of Old People: A Review of Research Methodologies and FindingsThe Gerontologist, 1971
- An Analysis of the Validity of Health QuestionnairesSocial Forces, 1958
- A Theory of Social Comparison ProcessesHuman Relations, 1954