This practice-led research thesis analyses and visualises central components
of Authentic Movement, with particular reference to the work of Dr Janet
Adler. By contextualising and comparing this improvisation method with
modern, post-modern and contemporary movement practices the author
describes the emergence of Authentic Movement and distinguishes it from
other practices. A new and original viewpoint is adopted and the practice's
aesthetic, visual and empathetic characteristics are explored in relationship
to and through visual art. The author, a learned Authentic Movement
practitioner, critiques, deconstructs and reframes the practice from a visual
arts- and performance-based, phenomenological perspective renaming it 'the
MoverWitness exchange'. Embedded aspects and skills of the MoverWitness
exchange, usually only accessible to firsthand practitioners of the method,
are made explicit through research processes of analysis, application and
visualisation. Hereby the practice's unique capacity to contain and express
binary embodied experiences and concepts is exposed. Resulting insights are
crystallised in a distinctive understanding of the MoverWitness exchange that
emphasises its suitability as a new learning and/or research methodology for
inter- and cross-disciplinary application.
Date of Award | 2007 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Sponsors | Dartington College of Arts |
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- Arts Based Research
- Arts Psychotherapy
- Arts and Science
- Authenticity
- Authentic Movement
- Binaries
- Blindness
- Body
- Collective Body
- Dance
- Dance and movement psychotherapy
- Embodiment
- Empathy
- Gastrula
- Improvisation
- Interdisciplinary Research
- Mover
- MoverWitness exchange
- Object Relation Theory
- Observation
- Paradigm
- Performance
- Phenomenology
- Sculpture
- Unconscious Choreography
- Visual Art
- Witness
Shared Habitats: the MoverWitness Paradigm
Goldhahn, E. (Author). 2007
Student thesis: PhD