Social Psychology Network

Maintained by Scott Plous, Wesleyan University

Listserv Message Center

Forum Home Page

If you are a professional with a Ph.D. related to social psychology and wish to send an email message to the SPSSI or SESP listserv, click on the button below.

RSS Feed  Note: SPN also distributes any messages posted through this service to more than 263,000 of its own Twitter and RSS feed subscribers, thereby allowing users to reach a wider audience than the two listservs do.


   
 Search the Archive
Search postings from:
to

for the following word(s):

Search Archive

 


 Forthcoming JSI issue on Ageism
Posted by: Todd Nelson
Title/Position: Associate Professor
School/Organization: California State University
Sent to listserv of: SESP
Date posted: February 20th, 2005


Dear SESP colleagues,

I am pleased to tell you that Blackwell publishers is currently producing issue 61 (2) of the Journal of Social Issues, which will focus on AGEISM (prejudice against older adults). The issue should be published and available by the end of May.

The issue represents the most current empirical and theoretical work by distinguished researchers in the field of age prejudice (see Table of Contents for the issue, at the end of this email). It is partitioned into three sections: foundations of ageism, experiencing ageism, and theoretical perspectives on ageism.

In social perception, we tend to automatically categorize people along three primary dimensions: Race, Gender, and Age. These automatic categorizations can and do facilitate the formation of category-specific stereotypes. While researchers know much about Racism and Sexism, we know comparatively little about Ageism. It can be argued that one reason this is so, is that ageism is much more "invisible" (i.e., institutionalized in our culture) than the other types of prejudice. For example, birthday cards communicate the message "I am sorry to hear you are another year older". There is a multi-billion dollar industry designed to hide signs of aging (wigs, creams, makeup, and of course, plastic surgery).

Prejudice against older people is pervasive and a pernicious influence on the health and well-being of older persons. It is my hope that this issue will help highlight the great work being done in the field by these distinguished researchers, and to help spark the imagination of other researchers who can join us in identifying the causes, consequences, and ways to reduce prejudice against older people.

Best,

Todd D. Nelson, Ph.D.
Gemperle Foundation Distinguished Professor
Department of Psychology
801 West Monte Vista Ave.
California State University
Turlock, California 95382
Office: (209) 667-3442
FAX: (209) 664-7067
E-mail: tnelson@athena.csustan.edu
___________

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Journal of Social Issues issue 61(2)
-- Forthcoming in May, 2005

AGEISM

Issue Editor: Todd Nelson

Ageism: Prejudice Against Our Feared Future Self

Todd D. Nelson

Foundations of Ageism

A Terror Management Perspective on Ageism

Andy Martens, Jamie L. Goldenberg, and Jeff Greenberg

Attitudes Toward Younger and Older Adults: An Updated Meta-analytic Review

Mary E. Kite, Gary D. Stockdale, Bernard E. Whitley, Jr., and Blair T. Johnson

This Old Stereotype: The Pervasiveness and Persistence of the Elderly Stereotype

Amy J. C. Cuddy, Michael I. Norton, and Susan T. Fiske

Experiencing Ageism

Ageism and Ageist Language Across the Lifespan: Intimate Relationships and Non-intimate Interactions

Jon F. Nussbaum, , Margaret J. Pitts, Frances N. Huber, Janice L. Krieger, and Jennifer E. Ohs

Re-Vision of Older Television Characters: A Stereotype-Awareness Intervention

Margie M. Donlon, Ori Ashman, and Becca R. Levy

Perceiving Age Discrimination in Response to Intergenerational Inequity

Teri A. Garstka, Mary Lee Hummert, and Nyla R. Branscombe

Theoretical Perspectives on Ageism

The Social Separation of Old and Young: A Root of Ageism

Gunhild O. Hagestad and Peter Uhlenberg

Ageism and Age Categorization

Bill Bytheway

Models of the Aging Self

Joel R. Sneed and Susan Krauss Whitbourne

Epilogue

Ageism Across the Lifespan: Towards a Self-Categorization Model of Ageing

Howard Giles and Scott A. Reid




Return to Top

©1996-2024, S. Plous