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Media portrayal of old age and its effects on attitudes in older people: findings from a series of studies

Psychology

Media portrayal of old age and its effects on attitudes in older people: findings from a series of studies

J. Wangler and M. Jansky

Explore how media portrayals of old age can shape the self-image and public perceptions of older adults in a captivating study by Julian Wangler and Michael Jansky. Discover the surprising impact of different age frames and the intricate responses they provoke in individuals.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Mass media portrayal of old age plays a great role in social perceptions of aging. However, there are hardly any empirical findings on the effects on recipients or to what extent this can change attitudes, especially amongst older people. Three types of media portrayals of old age in German news magazines were determined and used as stimulus material. In 2020, 910 participants (from 60 years) were confronted with different age frames in the course of a quasi-experimental survey. In order to substantiate the results, in 2022, 36 focused interviews were conducted with older people each of whom was presented with an age frame. This article links the central findings of both studies, with a focus on the qualitative study. The survey results showed that presenting a negative age frame led to an improvement in the self-image of old age whereas the public image of old age deteriorated significantly. After presenting a positive frame, the public image improved greatly while the self-image decreased. The interviews confirm these results. Type of reaction upon reception of the negative age frame varied between approval and clear signs of consternation. However, interviewees did not relate with the older people portrayed with personal aging often felt to be at odds with the portrayal of age shown. The positive frame was first received with pleasure and curiosity. Even so, interviewees became unsettled about how 'modern' aging is portrayed, some of them showing insecurity that they could not fulfil the characteristics and requirements of 'modern' aging. Media portrayal of age seems not to have the effects on older people as might be expected. Negative effects appear such as media portrayal making older recipients aware of their own age by presenting age in an exaggeratedly positive light in the "best agers" frame. In view of these results, the theory of social comparison processes may be used by which the media provides recipients with standards of comparison.
Publisher
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications
Published On
Apr 13, 2023
Authors
Julian Wangler, Michael Jansky
Tags
media portrayals
old age
self-image
public image
age frames
social comparison
self-esteem
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