Elder agency: How older New Zealanders played their part in New Zealand’s COVID-19 response

At higher risk of both contracting COVID-19 and suffering ill effects from it, older people figured prominently in accounts of the pandemic. In New Zealand, gov

Elder agency: How older New Zealanders played their part in New Zealand’s COVID-19 response

Seminars

Via Zoom https://vuw.zoom.us/j/96747312191


Courtney Addison

Dr Courtney Addison and Dr Jane Horan

At higher risk of both contracting COVID-19 and suffering ill effects from it, older people figured prominently in accounts of the pandemic. In New Zealand, government messaging enjoined the population to protect the nation’s elderly, who became the implicit objects of the widely shared appeal to ‘stay home, save lives’. Drawing on interviews with 23 people aged 62 and older, we explore how older New Zealanders imagined their own risk, resilience, and relationships – and in doing so their membership in the nation. Whilst some of our participants did feel vulnerable to COVID-19 and adjusted their lifestyles accordingly, others felt strong and healthy even as they acknowledged that age was a risk factor that theoretically applied to them. Furthermore, many of the people we spoke to expressed concern for other members of society, asserting a form of agency through solidarity and recognition that went unacknowledged in the dominant social discourse about what it meant to be old in the context of COVID-19. Through these reflections, participants often also considered how old age figured in political messaging around the pandemic, in some cases feeling cared for and recognised, and in others feeling as if age itself had become a political tool. We argue that ‘older’ New Zealanders are a more diverse group than was acknowledged at the time, and also a more agentive one, playing a critical contributing role in the pandemic response rather than merely acting as a rationale for public health measures.

Courtney Addison is a Lecturer in the Centre for Science in Society. Her work, which sits between Anthropology and Science and Technology Studies, explores the social and ethical dynamics of medicine (including gene therapy, Covid-19, and pharmaceuticals use) and the politics of knowledge around poisons used for conservation in Aotearoa.

Jane Horan is an economic anthropologist. She received her PhD from the University of Auckland in 2012 and now works as an applied anthropologist for commercial and NGO organisations, and Government agencies.