2019
DOI: 10.1080/02614367.2019.1653354
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Expanding understandings of wellbeing through researching women’s experiences of intergenerational somatic dance classes

Abstract: Engaging a feminist ethnographic methodology, this article offers a discussion of women's embodied experiences of wellbeing in intergenerational somatic dance classes. Somatic dance classes aim to develop embodied awareness, support ease and freedom in movement, and offer opportunities for creativity, agency and reflection. Drawing on in-depth interviews, observation and autoethnographic vignettes, three themes emerged from the empirical material that expand understandings of wellbeing as a fluid and dynamic e… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Articulations, in a Latourian sense, reveal unique embodied experiences of aging that are continually in motion, responding to environment, classmates, personal, and societal expectations, as well as physical, mental, and material factors present in the ballet studio. Previous dance literature with both younger and older dancers discusses embodied experiences as complex entanglements that are influenced by many factors including social, physical, mental, spiritual and material elements (i.e., Houston and McGill, 2013 ; Barbour et al, 2020 ). Expanding upon this previous literature, we engage Latour's concept of articulation to reveal how propositions of aging are being expressed through moving bodies as continually becoming forms that are simultaneously social, physical, mental and material.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Articulations, in a Latourian sense, reveal unique embodied experiences of aging that are continually in motion, responding to environment, classmates, personal, and societal expectations, as well as physical, mental, and material factors present in the ballet studio. Previous dance literature with both younger and older dancers discusses embodied experiences as complex entanglements that are influenced by many factors including social, physical, mental, spiritual and material elements (i.e., Houston and McGill, 2013 ; Barbour et al, 2020 ). Expanding upon this previous literature, we engage Latour's concept of articulation to reveal how propositions of aging are being expressed through moving bodies as continually becoming forms that are simultaneously social, physical, mental and material.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How we understand health is central in "the philosophy of medicine and the sociology of health and illness" (Broderick, 2011, p. 97). However, in contemporary Westernized societies, there are many different understandings of what constitute health and wellbeing (Barbour et al, 2020). Amongst these understandings is recognition that health is a multi-dimensional concept including physical, emotional, psychological, spiritual, and social dimensions (Card, 2017;Durie, 2004;Engel, 1977).…”
Section: Health and Wellbeingmentioning
confidence: 99%