This article focuses on the relevance of age vis-à-vis the body and sexuality in society. The author discusses how the symbolization of the body by differences of age displays an intertwining of social and sexuality issues. The central idea is that the constructions of age involve different notions of status related to the ageing body that are problematic in our sexuality because they form complex power relationships, creating boundaries, segmenting sexual expressions and committing individuals to spaces, identities and lifestyles. That is to say, as individuals use methods to capitalize on their sexuality, they produce varying meanings and ways of experiencing age. The notion of age-grading, an anthropological category to explain the connection between the notions of ageing body and society, will be discussed with the aim of clarifying how age shapes our sexuality. This paper is meant to encourage further debate, not to provide a finished discussion.
features a traditional book review, two responses by local Key West authors, an interview with the drag queens about their reactions to the book, and a photographic essay. In the spirit of Rupp and Taylor's participatory action research, we get a sense of what the research means, not just to the academic reader, but also to the drag queens and those familiar with their gender-bending world.
In low-and-middle-income countries like Mexico the impact of disadvantaged early childhood conditions (ECC) on later-life health in not well known and may be changing across birth cohorts. Our objective is to examine the impact of ECC on the propensity to have diabetes in three different cohorts of older adults aged 60-69 (born in 1930-1939, 1940-1949, 1950-1959). We examine to what extent differences in ECC, sociodemographic characteristics, and lifetime obesity explain the differences in the prevalence of diabetes across the cohorts. We use five waves of data from the Mexican Health and Aging Study (n=10,313). We estimate a series of logistic regression models and use counterfactual analyses to identify the roles of ECC and lifetime obesity on cohort-specific diabetes prevalence and on differences in diabetes prevalence across cohorts. Our results suggest that improvements in ECC would decrease prevalence of diabetes by 12.5% in the 1930-1939 cohort and 10% in the 1950-1959 cohort. However, the rise of obesity at age 50 counters this effect and leads to higher prevalence of diabetes in both cohorts. Our models show that if everyone had a normal weight at age 50, the prevalence of diabetes would decrease by 31.3% for the 1930-1939 cohort, 27.3% for the 1940-1949, and 26.7% for the 1950-1959 cohort. Despite improvements in socio-economic conditions during childhood in Mexico, the increase in lifetime obesity appear to offset the benefits derived from better ECC resulting in higher rates of diabetes.
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