Aging and Mentorship in the Margins: Multigenerational Knowledge Transfer among LGBTQ+ Chosen Families.

TitleAging and Mentorship in the Margins: Multigenerational Knowledge Transfer among LGBTQ+ Chosen Families.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2025
AuthorsPerone, AK, Toman, L, Reed, BGlover, Coldon, T, Osborne, A, Cook, J
JournalJ Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci
Date Published2025 Feb 15
ISSN1758-5368
Abstract

OBJECTIVES: For LGBTQ+ communities, learning often happens among chosen families, including older adults. Building on Pierre Bourdieu's theoretical concepts of capital (e.g., economic, social, cultural, symbolic) and queer theory of sexual capital, this article examines how LGBTQ+ chosen families share expertise to build knowledge and power across the life course.

METHODS: Using a transformative sequential mixed methods design from a larger project, this subproject includes data from six intracategorical focus groups with multigenerational and multiracial LGBTQ+ participants (n=37), including older adults, in a Midwestern community to center their voices, understand their experiences within and outside LGBTQ+ communities, foreground experiences of LGBTQ+ aging, and explore challenges and supports.

RESULTS: We identified three ways in which LGBTQ+ chosen families shared knowledge about various forms of capital: latent mentorship, bi- or multi-directional mentorship, and transgressive mentorship. We call these three types of knowledge sharing "mentorship in the margins," in which knowledge is shared within and among communities whose intersecting positionalities both limit and expand ways to imagine mentorship for navigating structural barriers and social, economic, and political inequities, especially regarding shared housing, family formation, and marriage equality.

DISCUSSION: The breadth and depth of multigenerational transfers of knowledge across the life course demonstrate the centrality of multigenerational chosen families for LGBTQ+ communities as they age, especially among multiply-minoritized communities (e.g., transgender women, BIPOC same-gender-loving communities). Knowledge shared among chosen families also reflects how "mentorship in the margins" builds individual and collective power that helps LGBTQ+ communities survive and thrive as they age.

DOI10.1093/geronb/gbaf027
Alternate JournalJ Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci
PubMed ID39953965