Analysis of Topophilia in the Elderly Living in Mountainous Area
10.2185/jjrm.62.726
- VernacularTitle:中山間地に住まう高齢者のトポフィリア=場所愛についての分析
- Author:
Masayoshi IDE
;
Reiko YAMAMOTO
;
Chie UNO
;
Sachiko SUZUKI
;
Yuko ITO
;
Tomihiro HAYAKAWA
;
Ken KATO
;
Hiroshi AMANO
;
Makoto MIYAJI
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- From:Journal of the Japanese Association of Rural Medicine
2014;62(5):726-744
- CountryJapan
- Language:Japanese
-
Abstract:
The aim of this study was to examine topophilia in the elderly living in mountainous areas. Topophilia, which is the geographical concept invented by Yi-Fu Tuan in 1999, is defined as the affective bond between people and place or environmental setting. A total of 120 elderly subjects living in a mountainous area responded to a standardized, validated 9-item Life Satisfaction Index K (subjective well-being) developed by Wataru Koyano and a new structured 6-item questionnaire on topophilia. Factor analyses revealed two domains of topophilia (public emotion and private emotion toward the living place). Public emotion was the emotion of being hard to leave the living place. Private emotion was the emotion of not loving the living place. There were areas where the elderly had a lesser degree of attachment toward the present state of the elderly could hardly have a sense of well-being and attachments to the current domicile. It is considered that not only physical but also mental approach is necessary to support the daily life of the elderly living in the mountainous area. Also, we examined the influences of aging and the living place on a subjective well-being and topophilia. There was no significant correlation between age and subjective well-being, but there was significant positive correlation between age and the degree of topophilia (r=0.234, p‹0.01). On the other hand, the degree of subjective well-being by the place of residence was significantly different (p‹0.001; ANOVA), and the degree of topophilia by the place of residence was not significantly different. These findings suggest that subjective well-being is not influenced by age but influenced by the place of residence, and topophillia is not influenced by the place of residence but influenced by age.