A New Paradigm for Qualitative Research in the United States: The Era of the Third Age

Authors

  • Dawn C. Carr Scripps Gerontology Center, USA
  • Lydia K. Manning Miami University, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18778/1733-8077.6.1.03

Keywords:

Third age, Qualitative gerontology, Meaning making, Meaningful engagement

Abstract

This paper reviews qualitative research in the United States, highlighting the ways research has changed in the era of the third age. With growing attention to positive and uplifting aspects of aging, qualitative research has played a critical role in the exploration of the ways in which older adults are engaging in meaningful ways with others. We describe two key methodological approaches that have been important to examining positive aspects of aging and exploring the extent to which a growing number of years of healthy retirement are redefining the aging experience: ethnographic research and grounded theory research. We also review key topics associated with qualitative research in the era of the third age. These topics fit within two dominant frameworks – research exploring meaningmaking in later life and research exploring meaningful engagement in later life. These frameworks were critically important to raising attention to meaningful experiences and interactions with others, and we propose that the agenda for future qualitative research in the United States should continue contributing to these frameworks. However, we note that a third framework should also be developed which examines what it means to be a third ager through use of a phenomenological approach, which will assist in the important task of theory building about the third age.

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Author Biographies

Dawn C. Carr, Scripps Gerontology Center, USA

Dawn C. Carr is a Postdoctoral Fellow of the Carolina Program for Aging and Health and the University of North Carolina’s Institute on Aging. She graduated with a doctoral degree in Social Gerontology from Miami University in 2009. Her research focuses on issues related to healthy retirement with a particular focus on the third age.

Lydia K. Manning, Miami University, USA

Lydia Manning is a doctoral candidate in the Social Gerontology program at Miami University in Oxford, OH. Before entering the program, she earned her B.A. in Anthropology and Sociology at Centre College in Danville, KY and her Masters of Gerontological Studies at Miami University. Her current areas of research include spirituality and older women and aging workforce issues. She served as the 2008 - 2010 student representative and student chair for the Association of Gerontology and Higher Education. Lydia believes strongly in service to the discipline and is committed to improving the lives of older adults. She is a qualitative researcher passionate about linking theory and in the form of applied gerontology and action research. Contact: manninlk@muohio.edu

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Published

2021-12-27

How to Cite

Carr, D. C., & Manning, L. K. (2021). A New Paradigm for Qualitative Research in the United States: The Era of the Third Age. Qualitative Sociology Review, 6(1), 16–33. https://doi.org/10.18778/1733-8077.6.1.03