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Living arrangements of the elderly in a changing society: the case of Iceland, 1880–1930
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
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1 Hareven, Tamara K., ‘Historical changes in the timing of family transitions: their impact on generational relations’, in Fogel, R. W. et al. eds., Aging: stability and change in the family (New York, 1981), 143Google Scholar. On the life-course perspective, see, for instance, Elder, Glen H. Jr, ‘The life-course perspective’, in Michael, Gordon ed., The American family in social-historical perspective, 3rd edn (New York, 1983), 54–60Google Scholar; ‘Family history and the life course’, in Hareven, Tamara K. ed., Transitions: the family and the life course in historical perspective (New York, 1978).Google Scholar
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15 This process is analyzed in Gunnlaugsson, , Family and household in Iceland, chapters I and VGoogle Scholar. See also Magnússon, Magnús S., Iceland in transition: labour and socio-economic change before 1940 (Lund, 1985).Google Scholar
16 See Gunnlaugsson, , Family and household in Iceland, chapters I and III.Google Scholar
17 The districts chosen are the same ones previously studied by myself and Guttormsson. Parishes from these districts are also dealt with in my book Family and household in Iceland.
18 Statistics of Iceland II, 63: statistical abstract of Iceland 1974 (Reykjavik, 1976), 14.Google Scholar
19 See Gunnlaugsson, Family and household in Iceland.
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21 Ibid. The population development of Iceland during the period was greatly affected by the emigration of around 15,000 Icelanders to Canada and the USA between 1870 and 1900.
22 See Gunnlaugsson, Family and household in Iceland, chapter V, and Magnússon, Iceland in transition, chapter 4.
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27 See, for instance, Briem, Páll, ‘Nokkur landsmál, einkum fátækramálið og skattamálið’, Andvari (1889), 16.Google Scholar
28 Blöndal, Jón, Félagsmál á Íslandi (Reykjavik, 1942), 76.Google Scholar
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30 Ibid., 71–80.
31 Statistics of Iceland II, 82, 214.Google Scholar
32 Blöndal, , Félagsmál á Íslandi, 22–30.Google Scholar
33 These figures are calculated on basis of the censuses of 1880 and 1930 preserved in the National Archives of Iceland, Reykjavik (hereafter NAI).
34 Ibid.
35 Statistique de l'lslande 92. Recensement de la population de l'lslande le 2 décembre 1930 (Reykjavik, 1937), 18*.Google Scholar
36 Statistics of Iceland II, 82, 56Google Scholar. Between 1890 and 1901 males at the age of 50 could on average expect to live 18.2 more years, while the average expected lifetime of this age group had risen to 24.1 more years between 1931 and 1940. The corresponding averages for women at the age of 50 were 22.4 years in 1890–1901, and 27 years in 1931–40.
37 See Smith, Daniel Scott, ‘Historical change in the household structure of the elderly in economically developed societies’, in Fogel, et al. eds., Aging: stability and change, 95.Google Scholar
38 Ibid., 96.
39 Vilmundarson, þorhallur, Urn sagnfræði. þróun sagnaritunar. Heimspekikenningar um sögu. Heimildafræði (Reykjavik, 1969).Google Scholar
40 Divorced elderly persons are left out of the study as their number was marginal and did not allow for any meaningful analysis. During the years 1906–1910 on an annual basis 0.7 out of 1,000 married couples divorced, while 1.9 out of 1,000 were divorced during the years 1926–1930 (Statistics of Iceland II, 63, p. 42).Google Scholar
41 It is important to note that one cannot presuppose - at least as regards the data for 1880 - that residence within a household of an offspring meant that the parent in question enjoyed ‘retirement’ in the modern sense of the term. It is more likely that he, or she, constituted part of the household's work-force as far as his, or her, health and capabilities permitted.
42 The illegitimacy ratio (the percentage of all births that were illegitimate) was high in Iceland during the latter part of the nineteenth century, around 20 per cent during the period 1880–1900. See Statistics of Iceland II, 82, 12–13.Google Scholar
43 Imhof, Arthur E., ‘Planning full-size life careers: consequences of the increase in the length and certainty of our life spans over the last three hundred years’, Ethnologia Europeae 17 (1987), 12–13.Google ScholarPubMed
44 Icelandic historical research has been more concerned with other stages of the life-cycle than the situation of the aged, and has in particular concentrated on youth and early adulthood. It is also a common perception that the history of ‘old age’, especially the history of old women and widows, has been neglected internationally, although a recent bibliographic overview has demonstrated an increasing interest in this field of research. See Blom, Ida, ‘The history of widowhood: a bibliographic overview’, Journal of Family History 16 (1991), 191–210.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
45 NAI, the census for Árnessýsla and Gullbringu- and Kjósarsýsla, 1930.Google Scholar
46 NAI, the censuses for Árnessýsla and Gullbringu- and Kjósarsýsla, 1880 and 1930.Google Scholar
47 Gunnlaugsson, Family and household in Iceland. Gunnlaugsson and Guttormsson, ‘Transitions into old age’.
48 Gunnlaugsson, Family and household in Iceland, chapter V. The pressure brought on children to remain on the family farm is a common theme in Icelandic literature dealing with the socio-psychological conflicts resulting from the emergence of the urban society during the 1920s and 1930s. See, for instance, Laxness, Halldór, Independent people (London, 1945).Google Scholar
49 See, for instance, Borscheid, Peter, Geschichte des Alters. Vom Spätmittelalter bis zum 18. Jahrhundert (Münster, 1989), 52Google Scholar. Gaunt, David, ‘The property and kin relationships of retired farmers in northern and central Europe’, in Wall, R. et al. eds., Family forms in historic Europe, 249–80Google Scholar. Troyansky, D. G., ‘Old age in the rural family of enlightened Provence’, in Stearns, Peter N. ed., Old age in preindustrial society (London, 1982)Google Scholar. Chudacoff, Howard P. and Hareven, Tamara K., ‘Family transitions into old age’, in Hareven, ed., Transitions, 217Google Scholar. Smith, Daniel Scott, ‘Parental power and marriage partners: an analysis of historical trends in Hingham, Massachusetts’, Journal of Marriage and the Family 35 (1973), 419–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
50 Statistique de l'lslande, 92, 42 and 54.Google Scholar
51 Gunnlaugsson, , Family and household in Iceland, 166–7Google Scholar. The functions of kinship networks in the fishing town of Keflavik in the jurisdictional district of Gullbringu- and Kjósarsýsla during the 1930s are well described in Lena, and Bergmann, Árni, Blátt og rautt. Bernska og unglingsár i tveimur heimum (Reykjavik, 1986), 11–21.Google Scholar
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53 See, for instance, Shanas, E., ‘Social myth as hypothesis: the case of the family relations of old people’, Gerontologist 19 (1979), 3–9CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed, and Young, M. and Willmott, P., Family and kinship in East London (London, 1957)Google Scholar. Recent research does, however, point to the life course in Western societies having become more ‘individualized’ during the last few decades, taking less regard of the requirements of kin. See Modell, John, Into one's own: from youth to adulthood in the United States 1920–1975 (Berkeley, 1989)Google Scholar. It has also been shown that in Europe ‘as much alteration took place in the household position of the elderly’ between 1962 and 1981 ‘as took place from traditional times up to the 1960s’ (Laslett, Peter, A fresh map of life: the emergence of the third age (London, 1989), 113)Google Scholar. David Eversley has pointed out that the requirements of the labour market in modern societies demand an increased personal mobility, which in turn can result in spatial segregation of generations. See Eversley, David, ‘Some new aspects of aging in Britain’, in Hareven, and Adams, eds., Aging and life course transitions, 252–6Google Scholar. For a bibliographic overview, see Hareven, Tamara K., ‘The history of the family and the complexity of social change’, American Historical Review 96 (1991), 108–11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
54 Gunnlaugsson and Guttormsson, ‘Transitions into old age’.
55 Statistics of Iceland II, 82, 12–13.Google Scholar
56 Smith, Richard M., ‘The structured dependence of the elderly as a recent development: some sceptical thoughts’, Ageing and Society 4 (1984), 425CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Anderson, M., ‘The impact on the family relationships of the elderly of changes since Victorian times in governmental income-maintenance’, in Shanas, E. and Sussman, M. eds., Family bureaucracy and the elderly (Durham, 1977), 36.Google Scholar
57 See Hansen, H. O., ‘The importance of remarriage in traditional and modern societies: Iceland during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and the cohort of Danish women born between 1926 and 1935’, in Dupaquier, J. et al. eds., Marriage and remarriage in populations of the past (London, 1981), 307–24.Google Scholar
58 Ruggles, Steven, ‘Availability of kin and the demography of historical family structure’, Historical Methods 19 (1986), 93–102.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
59 See, for instance, Guttormsson, Loftur, Bernska, ungdómur og uppeldi. Tilraun til félagslegrar og lýðfraæðilegrar greiningar (Reykjavik, 1983).Google Scholar
60 See Gunnlaugsson, Family and household in Iceland, chapters I and V.
61 Ibid., chapter V.
62 Hareven, , ‘The history of the family’, 109.Google Scholar
63 Magnússon, Iceland in transition.
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