Living solo at midlife: Can the pandemic de-stigmatize living alone in India?

J Aging Stud

Department of Social Sciences, School of Liberal Education, FLAME University, Pune, Maharashtra 412115, India. Electronic address:

Published: March 2021

In this piece I argue that the pandemic with its emphasis on social distancing as a desirable civic norm can reconfigure popular understanding of mature female singlehood in India- a condition that is often described in the language of lacks and social failures. The pandemic, I argue, has reaffirmed the everyday practices of upper middle-class professional women (ages 50-60 years) lending them as positive agentic subjects who are invested in self-actualization and an appreciation of intimate solitude. Overall, by specifically focusing on subjectivities and social aspirations of my interlocutors during the pandemic, I illuminate ways in which middle aged selfhood is lived in all its fragility, ambivalence and emergent possibilities.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jaging.2020.100907DOI Listing

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