Analysing transcripts of survey interview episodes, this paper
examines the
ways in which older people in Finland talk about their use of alcohol.
It also
aims to shed light on the meaning of alcohol use in the context of social
ageing.
The use of alcohol was described in forty structured interviews with
people
aged 60–89 years. They provided accounts of drinking situations or
contexts,
or juxtaposed their own drinking habits with that of ‘others’.
Perceptions of
these ‘others’ were constructed by interviewees from cultural
stereotypes of
Finnish drinking habits.
Descriptions of alcohol use were embedded in everyday life and cultural
frames rather than in those of old age or ageing. In the context of social
ageing,
alcohol use appeared in these interviews as a cultural indicator, reflecting
the
cultural habits and norms attached to drinking. As a social indicator,
it
suggested that advanced age is losing its significance as an independent
factor
distinguishing lifestyles.