O que você está fazendo aqui? uma etnografia sobre as narrativas de pessoas com 60 anos de idade ou mais estudantes de graduação da UFG e seus agenciamentos
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Universidade Federal de Goiás
Resumo
This thesis presents the analyses of an ethnography carried out between 2022 and 2023
on narratives of university and life experiences of a selected group of eleven students
aged sixty or over from some of the undergraduate courses at the Federal University of
Goiás - UFG, in Goiânia-GO. Its general objective is to analyze possible negotiations and
arrangements experienced by my interlocutors in their undergraduate courses, particularly
with regard to potential and possible transformations in the meanings that they may
attribute to their old age. From a methodological point of view, a qualitative approach
was used, involving bibliographic review, production of a field diary, application of a
prior survey, conducting semi-structured interviews mediated over the internet through
the Google Meet online meeting platform, and anthropological analysis of the narratives
collected in the field. In terms of the conclusions of this ethnography, the analyses of the
interlocutors’ narratives suggest that they, through their arrangements in the courses they
are taking or have taken, deal with some social markers intersected with age in an
academic environment that is still, historically and institutionally, centered on youth.
They also propose that they attribute importance to having entered the University in their
old age, in addition to considering that their university experiences are successful, both
in terms of learning and aggregated knowledge, and in the personal meanings of their
lives. It was relevant to understand the ways in which their arrangements materialize in
the specific ethnographic context in which I was inserted and, consequently, how they
construct and attribute, in a practical way, alternative meanings to their old age beyond
the realities of their work, their retirements and the relationships they maintain with their
families. Thus, old age seems to become, for them, a time when one can return to studying
for the second or third time, or even finally complete the long-awaited degree that
culminates an educational trajectory that was postponed and waiting in youth. In this
sense, if old age in the generations of the parents and grandparents of my interlocutors
was conceived, in general terms, as a time to retire and “disengage”, to a certain extent,
from social life, and then take care of grandchildren, attend groups for the elderly, rest,
take care of their health, travel, among other activities, my interlocutors seem to take,
often and simultaneously, alternative paths to those of their predecessors, namely
studying and opening, thus proposing, new engagements, projects and possibilities for
their lives.