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Adversity early in life may alter pathways of aging, but what interpretive processes can soften the blow of early insults? Drawing from cumulative inequality theory, the authors analyze trajectories of life evaluations and then consider whether early adversity offsets favorable expectations for the future. Results reveal that early adversity contributes to more negative views of the past but rising expectations for the future. Early adversity also has enduring effects on life evaluations, offsetting the influence of buoyant expectations. The findings draw attention to the limits of human agency under the constraints of early adversity-a process described as biographical structuration.
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Markus H. Schafer
Baylor University
Kenneth F. Ferraro
Purdue University West Lafayette
Sarah Mustillo
University of Notre Dame
American Journal of Sociology
Purdue University West Lafayette
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Schafer et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a11c02435f20a4e84c8fe42 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1086/655760
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