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Aging women in Minnesota: Rural—non-rural differences in life-history text
Abstract Much of the literature on rurality attempts to identify a point on a ‘size-of-place’ continuum at which the social organization of a given place begins to take on attributes defined as ‘rural’. The size of place which exhibits characteristically rural features has declined in our increasingly urbanized society. In looking at rural-urban differences of the elderly and the aging experience then, we ought to focus on even smaller places to detect the differences that a rural-non-rural gradient makes. The present study focuses on the more rural end of the rural-urban continuum and makes comparisons within a single region. The present discussion is based on life histories collected from a sample of thirty older rural women in a four-county area in central Minnesota during the summer and fall of 1986. Several themes are attributed to rural residents more than those living in non-rural settings. If these themes are important, life-orienting themes, they can be expected to structure individual accounts of life histories. The thirty subjects were grouped according to two classifications of rurality. A self-identification classification system is used throughout the discussion which groups the women into ‘rural’, ‘mixed’ and ‘non-rural’ groups. The life history texts were analyzed using the Minnesota Contextual Content Analysis program (MCCA), which scored meanings in the life history texts in two ways. Differences between scores of the three groups are discussed, along with the orienting themes contained in these life histories. Our conclusion is that the rural-non-rural segment of the rural-urban continuum is somewhat more complex than a single gradient.
Aging women in Minnesota: Rural—non-rural differences in life-history text
Abstract Much of the literature on rurality attempts to identify a point on a ‘size-of-place’ continuum at which the social organization of a given place begins to take on attributes defined as ‘rural’. The size of place which exhibits characteristically rural features has declined in our increasingly urbanized society. In looking at rural-urban differences of the elderly and the aging experience then, we ought to focus on even smaller places to detect the differences that a rural-non-rural gradient makes. The present study focuses on the more rural end of the rural-urban continuum and makes comparisons within a single region. The present discussion is based on life histories collected from a sample of thirty older rural women in a four-county area in central Minnesota during the summer and fall of 1986. Several themes are attributed to rural residents more than those living in non-rural settings. If these themes are important, life-orienting themes, they can be expected to structure individual accounts of life histories. The thirty subjects were grouped according to two classifications of rurality. A self-identification classification system is used throughout the discussion which groups the women into ‘rural’, ‘mixed’ and ‘non-rural’ groups. The life history texts were analyzed using the Minnesota Contextual Content Analysis program (MCCA), which scored meanings in the life history texts in two ways. Differences between scores of the three groups are discussed, along with the orienting themes contained in these life histories. Our conclusion is that the rural-non-rural segment of the rural-urban continuum is somewhat more complex than a single gradient.
Aging women in Minnesota: Rural—non-rural differences in life-history text
Shenk, Dena (Autor:in) / McTavish, Don (Autor:in)
Journal of Rural Studies ; 4 ; 133-140
01.01.1988
8 pages
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
Rural and Urban Differences in Welfare Exits: Minnesota Evidence 1986-1996
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