ABSTRACT

This book advances a new understanding of acculturation processes for older migrants, drawing on empirical data from migrants of Chinese heritage in Australia. It challenges the traditional models of acculturation, questions the conventional notion of integration and analyses the fluid nature of cultural identities. Drawing on insights from environmental gerontology, intercultural communication and acculturation theories, it conceptualises ageing in a foreign land as a home-building process, highlighting the collective contributions of individual, community, social, cultural, technological and environmental factors to older migrants’ well-being. A consideration of what it means to age ‘in place’ for those whose home is not necessarily attached to one place and one culture, this volume will appeal to social scientists with interests in ageing, gerontology, migration and diaspora, as well as those working in the fields of aged care policy.

chapter 1|18 pages

Ageing in a foreign land

chapter 2|18 pages

Research context and methodology

chapter 3|18 pages

Home as a place

Physical insideness

chapter 4|18 pages

Home as relationships

Social and cultural insideness

chapter 5|19 pages

Home as a transnational place

Autobiographical insideness

chapter 6|17 pages

Building a sense of home in a foreign land