Generations in Touch : Linking the Old and Young in a Tokyo Neighborhood / Leng Leng Thang

Por: Thang, Leng LengTipo de material: TextoTextoIdioma: Inglés Series The Anthropology of Contemporary IssuesDetalles de publicación: Ithaca : Cornell University Press, [2018] Descripción: X, 209 p. : il. ; 21 cmISBN: 978-0-8014-8732-3; 978-0801487323; 150171757XTema(s): Kotoen | Jubilados y pensionistas -- Situación social -- Japón | Ancianos -- Actitudes -- Japón | Ancianos -- Opinión pública -- Japón | Ancianos -- Viviendas -- Tokio | Ancianos -- Cuidados institucionales -- Japón -- Tokio | Relaciones intergeneracionales -- Tokio
Contenidos:
1. The Problem: Reengagement -- 2. The Place: Staff, Residents, and Children -- 3. Rhythms of Reencounters -- 4. The Goal: A Big Family Eating from the Same Rice Pot -- 5. The Vision: Dream Family -- 6. Fureai: Encounters and Exchanges -- 7. Fureai: Realities -- 8. Window to Society -- Appendix A: Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly in Japan -- Appendix B: The New Gold Plan -- References -- Index
Resumen: A dilemma long faced by western societies-how to bring the generations together-is also of growing concern in the east. In Japan, where, until recently, the extended family often lived under the same roof, social programs designed to facilitate interaction between old and young have proliferated. Leng Leng Thang offers an in-depth view of one of those programs, an unusual social welfare institution called Kotoen. Kotoen is a pioneering facility for multigenerational living, providing both daycare for preschoolers and a home for elderly residents. With its twin mottoes of fureai (being in touch) and daikazoku (large extended family), it has been the subject of widespread media attention and has served as a model for other institutions. Yet Kotoen has never before been studied seriously.Under its director's inspiring leadership, Kotoen looks unusually promising, but Thang is wary of simplistic conclusions. Her interviews, research, and work as a volunteer at Kotoen reveal the complaints common among some elderly residents toward their surroundings in old age institutions as well as the painful persistence of the traditional family ideal. Yet far from calling the experiment a failure, Thang challenges accepted wisdom and so-called common sense to reveal the advantages and limitations of the relationships fostered between Kotoen's "grandchildren" and "grandparents." The lessons learned from Kotoen illuminate the urgency of re-engaging the generations in an aging society and provide direction for improving the quality of life for all.
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Bibliografía: p. 199-205. -- Index

1. The Problem: Reengagement -- 2. The Place: Staff, Residents, and Children -- 3. Rhythms of Reencounters -- 4. The Goal: A Big Family Eating from the Same Rice Pot -- 5. The Vision: Dream Family -- 6. Fureai: Encounters and Exchanges -- 7. Fureai: Realities -- 8. Window to Society -- Appendix A: Residential Care Facilities for the Elderly in Japan -- Appendix B: The New Gold Plan -- References -- Index

A dilemma long faced by western societies-how to bring the generations together-is also of growing concern in the east. In Japan, where, until recently, the extended family often lived under the same roof, social programs designed to facilitate interaction between old and young have proliferated. Leng Leng Thang offers an in-depth view of one of those programs, an unusual social welfare institution called Kotoen. Kotoen is a pioneering facility for multigenerational living, providing both daycare for preschoolers and a home for elderly residents. With its twin mottoes of fureai (being in touch) and daikazoku (large extended family), it has been the subject of widespread media attention and has served as a model for other institutions. Yet Kotoen has never before been studied seriously.Under its director's inspiring leadership, Kotoen looks unusually promising, but Thang is wary of simplistic conclusions. Her interviews, research, and work as a volunteer at Kotoen reveal the complaints common among some elderly residents toward their surroundings in old age institutions as well as the painful persistence of the traditional family ideal. Yet far from calling the experiment a failure, Thang challenges accepted wisdom and so-called common sense to reveal the advantages and limitations of the relationships fostered between Kotoen's "grandchildren" and "grandparents." The lessons learned from Kotoen illuminate the urgency of re-engaging the generations in an aging society and provide direction for improving the quality of life for all.

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