Making moral selves through comparison: Narratives of moral decline and the modern virtuous self among middle‐class older adults in Nepal
journal contribution
posted on 2025-04-15, 05:56authored byPaola Tinè
AbstractDuring fieldwork among older adults in middle‐class families in the city of Bhaktapur (2018–2019), I recurrently came across comparative narratives of moral decline, depicting a stark contrast between the present time and a mythical past where ageing parents were treated “as gods.” In this paper, I analyze how, through acts of comparisons involving the weighing of opportunities between the past and the present and between difficulties facing parents and children, older people define their “moralities of expectation,” through which intimate politics of giving and taking are weighed against perceptions of hardship in the context of precarious middle‐class livelihoods. I suggest that comparison functions as a social practice with epistemological and affective connotations and that by comparing with real and imagined others, older people validate themselves as virtuous by anchoring to fluid and ever‐changing social systems. Ultimately, these findings shed light on how moral selfhoods are shaped through comparison with models of the past and the present, revealing how it is in this careful and purposeful evaluation of one's own behavior and that of others that social change is negotiated and the broader ethos revised.
History
Preferred citation
Tinè, P. (n.d.). Making moral selves through comparison: Narratives of moral decline and the modern virtuous self among middle‐class older adults in Nepal. Ethos. https://doi.org/10.1111/etho.70005