This paper examines, through discourse analysis at a micro level, how age
identities become interactionally constructed through talk. After a brief
overview of the constructivist arguments, the focus is on a single-case
interaction between an older client couple and three travel agency assistants.
The various means by which age is made salient by the participants and the
ensuing age identities that are created for and by the couple in particular are
investigated. The images of the ‘elderly’ as portrayed in holiday brochures,
providing one dimension of the context of this encounter and being significant
in older travellers' self-identity construction, are also looked at. It is argued
that discourse analysis has a useful contribution to make in social gerontology
in that it can illuminate the interactive processes through which ageing and
old age can be defined.