E-scaping the ageing body? Computer technologies and embodiment in later life

ABSTRACT This paper explores the embodied dimensions of computer and internet use in later life, and examines how technology use relates to constructions and experiences of the ageing body. It is argued that previous research on technology use and embodiment has neglected older bodies, in contrast to research on gender and disability. Furthermore, while earlier theorisations presented internet use as disembodied, it is argued that the experience of using such technologies is grounded in our embodiment. In the light of these limitations and arguments for more complete theories of the body, this paper explores how technology use relates to various aspects of embodiment. These issues are examined in the light of data from qualitative interviews and time-use diaries completed by retirees in 17 households in the United Kingdom. By examining the ‘technobiographies’ of these older computer users, it is shown that changes in body techniques are prompted and in some cases required by broader cultural and technological change. The findings evince the process of acquiring computing skills as an embodied competency, and as a form of ‘practical knowledge’ that can only be ‘learned by doing’. These experiences of technology use were embedded within constructions and experiences of ageing bodies. Although the participants drew on discourses of ageing in complex ways, their coding of computer technologies in terms of the competences of youth often reproduced hierarchies between young and old bodies.

[1]  Rafael F. Narváez Embodiment, Collective Memory and Time , 2006 .

[2]  J. L. Smith,et al.  Semi-Structured Interviewing and Qualitative Analysis , 1995 .

[3]  Paul Beynon-Davies,et al.  Older people and internet engagement: Acknowledging social moderators of internet adoption, access and use , 2008, Inf. Technol. People.

[4]  Roger Silverstone,et al.  Listening to a long conversation: An ethnographic approach to the study of information and communication technologies in the home , 1991 .

[5]  Jonathan A. Smith,et al.  Rethinking Methods in Psychology , 1995 .

[6]  Robin L. Hill,et al.  Keeping In Touch: Talking to Older People about Computers and Communication , 2007 .

[7]  Julia Twigg,et al.  The body, gender, and age: Feminist insights in social gerontology , 2004 .

[8]  Simon J Williams,et al.  The Lived Body: Sociological Themes, Embodied Issues , 1998 .

[9]  S. Katz,et al.  New sex for old: Lifestyle, consumerism, and the ethics of aging well. , 2003 .

[10]  J. Tambling How We Became Posthuman: Virtual Bodies in Cybernetics, Literature and Informatics by N. Katherine Hayles (review) , 2001, Modern Language Review.

[11]  C. Shilling The Body And Social Theory , 1995 .

[12]  William A. Gerber The Internet in Britain 2009 , 2009 .

[13]  C. P. Goodman,et al.  The Tacit Dimension , 2003 .

[14]  D. Rudman Shaping the active, autonomous and responsible modern retiree: an analysis of discursive technologies and their links with neo-liberal political rationality , 2006, Ageing and Society.

[15]  S. Katz Growing Older without Aging? Positive Aging, Anti-Ageism, and Anti-Aging , 2002 .

[16]  Marcel Mauss,et al.  Sociology and Psychology: Essays. , 1981 .

[17]  D. Lupton,et al.  The Embodied Computer/User , 1995 .

[18]  S. Holloway,et al.  Cyberkids : children in the information age , 2003 .

[19]  Mei-Chen Lin,et al.  Representation of age identities in on-line discourse , 2004 .

[20]  C. Shilling The body in culture, technology and society , 2004 .

[21]  Mike Featherstone,et al.  Images of aging: cultural representations of later life , 1995 .

[22]  R EEG-OLOFSSON,et al.  [Body and soul]. , 1957, Social-Medicinsk tidskrift.

[23]  Helen Kennedy,et al.  Cyborg lives?: women's technobiographies , 2001 .

[24]  H. Bouma,et al.  Technology generation and age in using layered user interfaces , 2001 .

[25]  Susan Hawthorne,et al.  Cyberfeminism: connectivity, critique and creativity , 1999 .

[26]  C. Laz Age embodied , 2003 .

[27]  J. Jolles,et al.  The efficiency of using everyday technological devices by older adults: the role of cognitive functions , 2009, Ageing and Society.

[28]  N. Selwyn The information aged: A qualitative study of older adults' use of information and communications technology , 2004 .

[29]  Mike Featherstone,et al.  POST-BODIES, AGING AND VIRTUAL REALITY , 2003 .

[30]  S. M. Hansen Where the action is. , 1985, Journal (National Association for Hospital Development (U.S.)).

[31]  Paul Dourish,et al.  Where the action is , 2001 .

[32]  E. Saunders,et al.  MAXIMIZING COMPUTER USE AMONG THE ELDERLY IN RURAL SENIOR CENTERS , 2004 .

[33]  A. Clark,et al.  The Extended Mind , 1998, Analysis.

[34]  A. James,et al.  Social Identities Across the Life Course , 2002 .

[35]  Marcel Mauss,et al.  Sociology and Psychology: Essays. , 1979 .

[36]  Birgit Jæger,et al.  Young Technologies in Old Hands: An International View on Senior Citizen's Utilization of ICT , 2005 .

[37]  Göran Bolin Mobile Generations: The Role of Mobile Technology in the Shaping of Swedish Media Generations , 2008 .

[38]  Ingunn Moser,et al.  Disability and the promises of technology: Technology, subjectivity and embodiment within an order of the normal , 2006 .

[39]  B. Östlund THE DECONSTRUCTION OF A TARGETGROUP FOR IT-INNOVATIONS : Elderly users ́ technological needs and attitudes towards new IT , 2002 .

[40]  N. Selwyn,et al.  Older adults' use of information and communications technology in everyday life , 2003, Ageing and Society.

[41]  Michele White Where do you want to sit today? Computer programmers' static bodies and disability , 2006 .

[42]  Sara J. Czaja,et al.  INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND OLDER ADULTS , 2007 .

[43]  S. Katz Busy Bodies: Activity, aging, and the management of everyday life , 2000 .

[44]  G. Valentine Doing household research: interviewing couples together and apart , 1999 .

[45]  Nick Crossley Reflexive Embodiment in Contemporary Society , 2006 .

[46]  N. K. Hayles My Mother Was a Computer: Digital Subjects and Literary Texts , 2005 .

[47]  R. Baaren,et al.  Filling a missing link: the influence of portrayals of older characters in television commercials on the memory performance of older adults , 2010, Ageing and Society.

[48]  Margaret Richardson,et al.  ‘Getting on’: older New Zealanders’ perceptions of computing , 2005, New Media Soc..

[49]  Robert Szabo,et al.  Information and Communication Technologies , 2012, Lecture Notes in Computer Science.

[50]  M. Hepworth,et al.  The Mask of Ageing and the Postmodern Life Course , 1991 .

[51]  Nick Crossley,et al.  Researching Embodiment by Way of ‘Body Techniques’ , 2007 .

[52]  Soon-Hee Whang The Body as Culture , 1996 .

[53]  L. Haddon,et al.  Information and communication technologies and the young elderly , 1996 .

[54]  S. Bernstein,et al.  Introduction , 2022 .