Growing Old in El Barrio / / Judith Noemi Freidenberg.

What is daily life like for an elderly person whose income barely covers basic needs? How is life constrained if that person is living within the same marginal enclave to which she first migrated decades ago? How does the implementation of national policies and programs affect the daily life of thos...

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Superior document:Title is part of eBook package: De Gruyter New York University Press Backlist eBook-Package 2000-2013
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Place / Publishing House:New York, NY : : New York University Press, , [2000]
©2000
Year of Publication:2000
Language:English
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Physical Description:1 online resource
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Other title:Frontmatter --
CONTENTS --
Acknowledgments --
Preface --
Introduction: Contexts of Immigrant Experience: Aging in Place --
PART I: Growing Old --
1. From New Harlem to El Barrio de Nueva York: A Social History of East Harlem, 1658–1948 --
2. “Yo Aprendí de Todo Gracias a la Providencia” (I Learned to Do Everything Thanks to Providence): Growing Up a Manual Laborer in an Export-Oriented Economy (1902–1948) --
PART II: Growing Old in El Barrio --
3. “Buscando Ambiente”: Searching for a Better Life in a Barrio in the United States --
4. “El Barrio de Nueva York”: From the 1950s to the 1990s --
5. “Aquí Yo Me Maté Trabajando” (Here I Killed Myself Working): Work Trajectories and Experiences in the Labor Structure --
PART III: Being Old in El Barrio --
6. “La Edad Es Segun la Persona” (Age Depends on the Person): The Meanings of Being Old --
7. “Los Doctores No Pueden Curar Todas las Enfermedades” (Doctors Cannot Cure All Illnesses): Illness of the Soul and of the Body --
8. “Usted Sabe Lo Triste Que Es Eso? No Tener Quien Vele por Uno?” (Do You Know How Sad That Is? Not Having Someone Watch Out There for You?): Connections and Illness of the Soul --
9. “Estamos Pobres de Dinero Pero Somos Todos Ricos” (We Are Poor in Money, But We Are All Rich): Coping with Economic Constraints in Daily Life --
PART IV: Policy Ethnography of Aging in El Barrio --
10. El Barrio: A Metaphor for Social Issues in New York City --
11. “Nadie Sabe Donde Va a Parar El Barrio” (Nobody Knows Where El Barrio Will End Up): Local-Level Policy-Making --
Ethnographic Findings and Policy Recommendations --
Notes --
References --
Author Index --
Subject Index --
About the Author
Summary:What is daily life like for an elderly person whose income barely covers basic needs? How is life constrained if that person is living within the same marginal enclave to which she first migrated decades ago? How does the implementation of national policies and programs affect the daily life of those growing old in Spanish Harlem? In Growing Old in El Barrio, Judith Freidenberg addresses these questions by examining the life-course and daily experiences of the elderly residents of El Barrio. She interweaves the economy of immigrant neighborhoods with the personal experiences of Latinos aging in Harlem--such as Doña Emiliana, who lived in Spanish Harlem from her migration in 1948 to her death in 1995. Freidenberg further links policy issues to social issues critical to the daily lives of this population. Combining extensive fieldwork interviews with historical and demographic population data, Growing Old in El Barrio paints an ethnographic picture of aging in Spanish Harlem and illustrates the emergence of New York as a city divided by ethnicity and class.
Format:Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
ISBN:9780814728994
9783110706444
DOI:10.18574/nyu/9780814728994.001.0001
Access:restricted access
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: Judith Noemi Freidenberg.