Chasing Independence: Growing Old in the Shadow of an American Ideal

How independence works as an unquestioned ideal for aging in America鈥攁nd why it is never quite realized

Hardcover

Price:
$120.00/拢100.00
ISBN:
Published:
Jul 14, 2026
2026
Pages:
264
Size:
6.13 x 9.25 in.
Illus:
5 b/w illus. 4 tables.

In twenty-first-century America, as people live longer than ever before, it鈥檚 taken for granted that older adults should be active and self-reliant. News stories describe nonagenarians who run marathons, reality shows feature attractive older women competing for the love of a widowed bachelor, and policymakers encourage aging 鈥渋n place鈥 rather than in a nursing home. In Chasing Independence, Guillermina Altomonte turns a critical eye on these expectations and asks what happens when independence becomes the yardstick by which we measure the quality of old age. Drawing on ethnographic observations in a skilled nursing facility in New York City, interviews with older adults and healthcare workers, and historical materials, she shows how independence operates as an unquestioned standard for medical assessments, allocation of services, and even as a way to determine an older person鈥檚 identity and self-worth.

Despite the elevation of independence as the dominant ideal of aging, Altomonte reports, it is always a moving target, redefined and pushed out of reach by individual, economic, and social constraints. She examines the immense effort that older people, their families, and healthcare workers invest as they chase independence鈥攁nd what happens when those efforts fall short. Exploring the conundrums and dramas, the meanings and connections that older people experience in the relentless struggle to maintain independence, Altomonte shows that the American obsession with this cultural value often obscures real needs for support and care.