Aging Political Activists: Personal Narratives from the Old Left
By (Author) David P. Shuldiner
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd March 1995
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Biography: historical, political and military
Far-left political ideologies and movements
324.273750922
Hardback
312
Aging Political Activists is at once a series of political autobiographies, a set of personal narratives of social commitment, a model for qualitative research, and a challenge to current theory and practice in the social and behavioral sciences. It presents and examines the life stories of four individualsclose friends and former members of the Communist Party USArevealing the ways they have developed and sustained their personal values and political outlook through a lifetime of involvement in movements for social change. Shuldiner approaches the interviews as a collaborative effort with his subjects who both describe their identities and experiences and critique the interview process, offering alternate readings of the content of their narratives or new directions for inquiry. These portraits of older activists challenge notions about the role of the personal in the development of political identity, while shifting the debate among gerontologists between activity versus disengagement in old age to a discussion of the dialectical relationship of these two aspects of human behavior throughout a lifespan.
This book will be of intrest to libraries in Connecticut and to acdemic libraries for "the stories"-Assoc. of Jewish Libraries Newsletter
"This book will be of intrest to libraries in Connecticut and to acdemic libraries for "the stories""-Assoc. of Jewish Libraries Newsletter
DAVID P. SHULDINER holds dual appointments as Visiting Professor with the School of Family Studies at the University of Connecticut and as Humanities Program Coordinator with the State of Connecticut, Department of Social Services, Elderly Services Division./e Trained in anthropology, folklore, and gerontology, he has conducted research among the aging since 1980 when he began interviewing veterans of the Jewish Labor Movement who were active in the United States in the first half of the 20th century.