The Lotos-Eaters: Aging and Identity in a Yacht Club Community

Author:   Carol Warren
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9781138193673


Pages:   120
Publication Date:   05 December 2016
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Lotos-Eaters: Aging and Identity in a Yacht Club Community


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Author:   Carol Warren
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.317kg
ISBN:  

9781138193673


ISBN 10:   1138193674
Pages:   120
Publication Date:   05 December 2016
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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The Lotos Eaters is quite a masterfully done ethnography. It draws on key sociological concepts and a sociology of everyday life perspective to illuminate the experiences of an aging population that has created its own unique community. Warren's work places their experiences-their activities, norms, and interactions-in a framework that is illuminating, but there is a lightness in the analysis that fosters discussion and thought, rather than offering definite answers. It's a great example of how to do an ethnography based on participant observation. -- Shirley A. Hill, Professor of Sociology, University of Kansas


Warren's autobiographical ethnography unfolds in sparkling Southern California, where a homogeneous community of 'Middle Class Millionaires' live the dream of most Americans to Age in Place with relative financial and health security. For the 60 to 90 year olds, the local watering hole, the Yacht Club, becomes a site of sociability and competition, a hub of interactive races, games, and parties, walks, and conversation. Embracing the longevity-dividend of cumulative advantage softens the sting of age and ageism as life-course thresholds pass. Warren's insightful work confirms the well-documented benefits of positive social support. It takes a village to age well in America. -Carroll L. Estes, Professor Emerita, University of California, San Francisco, USA The Lotos-Eaters offers a fascinating, insightful first-person ethnography of a retirement community inhabited predominantly by 'new money,' upper-income people 60 and older. After a sensitive account of the everyday life and daily rounds of residents of the broader Sands marina community, Warren focuses on the subtleties of social interaction, self-presentation, and identity work specifically among those who form an active and influential community in and through the local Yacht Club. Here the ethnography highlights a compelling, ironic contrast: On the one hand, upbeat sociability tied to boating, parties, drinking, humorous sex talk and pressures to retain slender, youthful bodies; on the other, the necessity of coming to terms with the inevitable processes of aging-illness, disability, mental and physical deterioration, and death. An engaged, personal and detailed qualitative study of a unique and intriguing community! -Robert M. Emerson, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles, USA The Lotos-Eaters is quite a masterfully done ethnography. It draws on key sociological concepts and a 'sociology of everyday life' perspective to illuminate the experiences of an aging population that has created its own unique community. Warren's work places their experiences-their activities, norms, and interactions-in a framework that is illuminating, but there is a lightness in the analysis that fosters discussion and thought, rather than offering definite answers. It's a great example of how to do an ethnography based on participant observation. -Shirley A. Hill, Professor of Sociology, University of Kansas, USA


Warren's autobiographical ethnography unfolds in sparkling Southern California, where a homogeneous community of `Middle Class Millionaires' live the dream of most Americans to Age in Place with relative financial and health security. For the 60 to 90 year olds, the local watering hole, the Yacht Club, becomes a site of sociability and competition, a hub of interactive races, games, and parties, walks, and conversation. Embracing the longevity-dividend of cumulative advantage softens the sting of age and ageism as life-course thresholds pass. Warren's insightful work confirms the well-documented benefits of positive social support. It takes a village to age well in America. -Carroll L. Estes, Professor Emerita, University of California, San Francisco, USA The Lotos-Eaters offers a fascinating, insightful first-person ethnography of a retirement community inhabited predominantly by `new money,' upper-income people 60 and older. After a sensitive account of the everyday life and daily rounds of residents of the broader Sands marina community, Warren focuses on the subtleties of social interaction, self-presentation, and identity work specifically among those who form an active and influential community in and through the local Yacht Club. Here the ethnography highlights a compelling, ironic contrast: On the one hand, upbeat sociability tied to boating, parties, drinking, humorous sex talk and pressures to retain slender, youthful bodies; on the other, the necessity of coming to terms with the inevitable processes of aging-illness, disability, mental and physical deterioration, and death. An engaged, personal and detailed qualitative study of a unique and intriguing community! -Robert M. Emerson, Professor Emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles, USA The Lotos-Eaters is quite a masterfully done ethnography. It draws on key sociological concepts and a 'sociology of everyday life' perspective to illuminate the experiences of an aging population that has created its own unique community. Warren's work places their experiences-their activities, norms, and interactions-in a framework that is illuminating, but there is a lightness in the analysis that fosters discussion and thought, rather than offering definite answers. It's a great example of how to do an ethnography based on participant observation. -Shirley A. Hill, Professor of Sociology, University of Kansas, USA


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Carol A. B. Warren is Professor Emerita of Sociology at the University of Kansas, USA.

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