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The Significance of Friendship for Women in Later Life
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 November 2008
Abstract
As middle-class women enter retirement, through giving up a job or losing a spouse or dependent relative, they adopt different friendship strategies. Some extend and deepen existing relationships; some make new friends; some develop the role of ‘good neighbour’; some grow closer to siblings. One of the most popular ways of making friends is to join a voluntary association, but this strategy is not always successful. Between them, friends provide a variety of services, supports and company. Old friends contribute something unique to the acceptance of ageing and adjustment to changing circumstances. Middle-class friendships have a hedonistic quality which matches the lifestyle of middle-class women in retirement.
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37 In this they resemble some of the retiring middle-class men, described by Crawford, Marion, ‘Retirement and Disengagement’, Human Relations, Vol. 24, No. 3, pp. 255–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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