Hanna Ojala
University of Tampere
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hanna Ojala.
Journal of Aging Studies | 2016
Hanna Ojala; Ilkka Pietilä; Pirjo Nikander
Despite long-term, conceptually and theoretically refined discussions, the phenomenon of ageism still remains empirically under-developed. To better understand the diversity of ageism, its contextual variations and gender-specific dynamics in peoples daily lives, this study focuses on how different interactional contexts shape mens perceptions of ageism. Using data from 67 thematic personal interviews with 23 middle and working class men aged 50-70, this study contributes to the sorely lacking, empirically based and nuanced understanding of how ageism is experienced, and adds to the research on the internalization of ageism which to date has primarily focused on older womens experiences. Key findings are as follows: 1) men are not totally immune to ageism, but rather, 2) the experiences and interpretations of ageism are structured by the interactional context in question, 3) acts and expressions interpreted as discriminative in one context become defused in others, and that 4) in family contexts positive ageism represents a naturalized order of things within intergenerational relations. The study contributes to the existing body of work on age negotiations and on the ways in which chronological age as a cultural resource functions in interaction. It also underlines that adopting a gender and context sensitive approach into ageism opens up promising avenues for further conceptual development.
Ageing & Society | 2016
Hanna Ojala; Toni Calasanti; Neal King; Ilkka Pietilä
ABSTRACT The neo-liberal ideologies that point to individual responsibility for risks increasingly influence countries of the global North. The anti-ageing industry reflects this dictate and encourages middle-aged people to use their products and services to manage their ageing. However, given the negative connotations attached to the term ‘anti-ageing’, which is usually seen to focus on aesthetics and thus be a womans concern, men may be likely to disavow being involved in such activities. The article uses interview data collected from men aged 42–70 from Finland and the United States of America to explore whether and how men adhere to the call to manage their ageing when such anti-ageing activities are seen to be potentially feminising. We find that these men reflected neo-liberalism in the sense that they felt that, although ageing cannot be prevented, it can be controlled. Also while they generally rejected anti-ageing products and services that they judged to affect aesthetics, they reported that they use those that they define as promoting health and performance instead. For them, masculinity is the instrumental focus on performance to the exclusion of beauty or attractiveness. Masculine anti-ageing bodily strategies must also be ‘natural’, involving hard work rather than the use of products, which they regard as never having been scientifically proven to enhance performance. Thus, in talk of their anti-ageing, men distance themselves from women.
Men and Masculinities | 2017
Ilkka Pietilä; Toni Calasanti; Hanna Ojala; Neal King
Because paid work is taken to be central to manhood, scholarly and popular discourse have characterized retirement as presenting a “crisis of masculinity.” However, such a crisis is not borne out by research, perhaps because scholars have not considered how class might shape masculinities and thus expectations and experiences of retirement. Using data obtained from interviews with Finnish metal workers and engineers who are either approaching retirement or recently retired, we ask whether (1) this crisis discourse is reflected in their retirement expectations, (2) it matches their actual experiences of retirement, and (3) retirement disrupts the masculinities of some class groups more than others. We find evidence of this retirement crisis discourse in our respondents’ views of retirement, but not in their actual experiences, belying the homogeneity of masculinity implied by it. Class shapes both the perceived content of crises and the actual retirement experiences.
Health Psychology | 2013
Toni Calasanti; Ilkka Pietilä; Hanna Ojala; Neal King
Journal of Aging Studies | 2011
Ilkka Pietilä; Hanna Ojala
Journal of Aging Studies | 2013
Ilkka Pietilä; Hanna Ojala; Neal King; Toni Calasanti
Gerontologist | 2016
Toni Calasanti; Neal King; Ilkka Pietilä; Hanna Ojala
Ageing & Society | 2016
Jari Pirhonen; Hanna Ojala; Kirsi Lumme-Sandt; Ilkka Pietilä
Archive | 2004
Reetta Muhonen; Hanna Ojala
International Journal of Men's Health | 2016
Ilkka Pietilä; Hanna Ojala; Sanna Helminen; Teuvo L.J. Tammela