2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.lisr.2018.08.001
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Reading as a lifeline among aging readers: Findings from a qualitative interview study with older adults

Abstract: Older adults who identify as readers and choose to read for pleasure in their everyday lives are understudied despite the persistence and pervasiveness of this kind of reading. The phenomenology of reading and critical age studies inform this pilot project that uses in-depth interviews conducted with five readers who are between the ages of 75-90 years and who live in Canada. Data analysis followed principles of close reading and thematic analysis. Findings privilege the voices of the older readers and show ho… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Resilience, positive state, and emotional existence of an individual are key elements of happiness (Malyn et al, 2020). Reading can give older adults a sense of amusement and participation and helps improve their resilience and refl ective attitude toward life (Rothbauer & Dalmer, 2018). Th rough thematic discussion and expression of feelings and emotions in a safe and supportive environment, selfconfi dence and self-identity of older adults can increase (Chamberlain, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Resilience, positive state, and emotional existence of an individual are key elements of happiness (Malyn et al, 2020). Reading can give older adults a sense of amusement and participation and helps improve their resilience and refl ective attitude toward life (Rothbauer & Dalmer, 2018). Th rough thematic discussion and expression of feelings and emotions in a safe and supportive environment, selfconfi dence and self-identity of older adults can increase (Chamberlain, 2019).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For some readers, keeping track of their reading is another temporal mode for shoring up the material infrastructure of their reading practice (Rothbauer and Dalmer, 2018). Notebooks with yearly, weekly, monthly records of authors and titles read, collections of borrowing slips, stored library borrowing histories and folders full of reviews and notes of books to be read [6], and books that have been read are all ways of representing a reading history with an "unbroken temporality" (Krekula, 2020).…”
Section: Libraries and Books As "Stable Places Of Differentiated Return"mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…75 years of age and older) found that reading was a "lifeline" for these readers. It functioned as a method of navigating episodes of one's life and was a way to preserve what was deemed important about living and life (Rothbauer, 2018;Rothbauer and Dalmer, 2018). These older readers reflected on reading over the course of their lives, but we can see how a lifeline is constructed in a more immediate account offered by 24-year-old Selina as she describes her reading practice: [ .…”
Section: Reading As Temporalized Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Future research is therefore needed to explore how public libraries support the well-being of older adults via collections, outreach services to bring collection items to library users with limited mobility, volunteer opportunities, and physical spaces, and how these services are experienced by this demographic. As noted by Rothbauer and Dalmer (2018), reading among older adults can have several positive social and health outcomes. Understanding how public libraries can facilitate this practice via their collections may be an important area of future research.…”
Section: Limitations and Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%