ABSTRACT
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to have a profound impact on the well-being and social connectedness of older adults. In an era of physical distancing, older adults’ connections are changing. While digital leisure spaces are often described to enhance social connections, little is written about older adults and digital connectedness in a time of physical distancing. We completed 20 in-depth interviews with older Canadians (average age 77) during the initial wave (Spring 2020). This paper draws on critical tenets of Age Studies, leisure as resistance, and an understanding of the digital divide to reflect on interviews with older adults about their technology use during the COVID-19 pandemic. We reflect on technology use as resistance to ageist stereotypes, discuss facilitators of technology use as lived privilege that deepen the digital divide during COVID-19 for some, and identify opportunities for supporting older adults not presently using technology for social connection.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Notes
1 alongside pandemics of mental health, systemic racism, mass shootings, climate change, and damaging political polarity among others.
2 With roots in Marxist Critical Theory of class, work, and economics, which spurred other equity-seeking frameworks like critical disability studies, critical race theory, among others.
3 (The promotion, protection and enjoyment of human rights on the Internet. UN General Assembly, Citation2016)
4 The authors recognize strategic essentialism as a strategy that as “may suffice in the immediate future to mimic essentialist ideas to the benefit of particular individual [or group]” (Lee, Citation2011, p. 265) but does not ultimately work to clarify misconceptions about a culture, group, or identity.