{"title":"在南非的跨学科环境研究中体验舞蹈运动治疗实践的原则","authors":"Athina Copteros, Vicky Karkou, Carolyn Gay Palmer","doi":"10.1080/17432979.2023.2268143","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"AbstractThis research study is an initial exploration of ways in which principles of dance movement therapy practice can be used in South Africa. Culturally-relevant principles in dance movement therapy practice were identified in an earlier phase of the study and informed a short-term group intervention within a transdisciplinary research team that dealt with water resources management. The research question for this phase of the study focused on the experiences of members of this group: How did researchers from a water resources management transdisciplinary environmental research group program in South Africa experience their participation in a group that adopted selected, culturally-sensitive dance movement therapy principles and practices? Hermeneutic phenomenology provided the methodological framing. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis influenced the identification of themes. We conclude that principles of dance movement therapy have relevance in multiple and diverse ways within environmental transdisciplinary teams, beyond typical therapy contexts.Keywords: Dance movement therapy/psychotherapyecopsychologycomplex social-ecological systemstransdisciplinaritywater resources managementcommunity engagementtraumaembodiment Author contributionsAll authors contributed to the final approval of the paper.Disclosure statementTwo of the three co-authors are qualified and registered dance movement therapists in their respective countries of residency. The Institute for Water Researcher’s Ethics Committee approved the research.Figure 6. Participants created this sand tray from items of nature as well as the animal that symbolic represented each one of them as part of a free moving experience during Session Four ‘How to extend healing to wider community’.Display full sizeFigure 7. Participants mirroring each other’s movements in the circle part of Session One ‘How to limit variables of power, privilege and difference’.Display full sizeFigure 8. Participants moving together in a circle part of Session Four ‘How to extend healing to wider community’.Display full sizeAdditional informationFundingSouth African funders: National Arts Council; National Research Foundation; Oppenheimer Memorial Trust; Water Research Commission; Department of Environment Affairs – Natural Resources Management Programme and United Kingdom funders: Common Thread and Santander.Notes on contributorsAthina CopterosAthina Copteros is a dance movement psychotherapist and transdisciplinary environmental researcher. Athina works at the art-science-embodiment interface, focusing on human and more-than-human environmental relations. Her work is trauma informed and draws on transpersonal psychotherapy, the discipline of authentic movement, embodiment, enactment and the phenomenological standpoint of interconnectedness.Vicky KarkouVicky Karkou is the Director of the Research Centre for Arts and Wellbeing at Edge Hill University, a dance movement psychotherapist and an internationally known academic and researcher in arts and health and arts psychotherapies. Her research has received external funding of over 5 million from the funding bodies such as the ESRC, AHRC, NIHR and the Arts Council, the Wellcome Trust. She has recently published her fifth book and has over 100 publications in peer reviewed journals.Carolyn Gay PalmerCarolyn Gay Palmer is an Emeritus Professor in the Institute for Water Research, and the African Research Universities Water Centre of Excellence, at Rhodes university, South Africa. Her research field encompasses transdisciplinary approaches to social-ecological justice and well-being.","PeriodicalId":43755,"journal":{"name":"Body Movement and Dance in Psychotherapy","volume":"23 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-17","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Experiencing principles of dance movement therapy practice within transdisciplinary environmental research in South Africa\",\"authors\":\"Athina Copteros, Vicky Karkou, Carolyn Gay Palmer\",\"doi\":\"10.1080/17432979.2023.2268143\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"AbstractThis research study is an initial exploration of ways in which principles of dance movement therapy practice can be used in South Africa. Culturally-relevant principles in dance movement therapy practice were identified in an earlier phase of the study and informed a short-term group intervention within a transdisciplinary research team that dealt with water resources management. The research question for this phase of the study focused on the experiences of members of this group: How did researchers from a water resources management transdisciplinary environmental research group program in South Africa experience their participation in a group that adopted selected, culturally-sensitive dance movement therapy principles and practices? Hermeneutic phenomenology provided the methodological framing. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis influenced the identification of themes. We conclude that principles of dance movement therapy have relevance in multiple and diverse ways within environmental transdisciplinary teams, beyond typical therapy contexts.Keywords: Dance movement therapy/psychotherapyecopsychologycomplex social-ecological systemstransdisciplinaritywater resources managementcommunity engagementtraumaembodiment Author contributionsAll authors contributed to the final approval of the paper.Disclosure statementTwo of the three co-authors are qualified and registered dance movement therapists in their respective countries of residency. The Institute for Water Researcher’s Ethics Committee approved the research.Figure 6. Participants created this sand tray from items of nature as well as the animal that symbolic represented each one of them as part of a free moving experience during Session Four ‘How to extend healing to wider community’.Display full sizeFigure 7. Participants mirroring each other’s movements in the circle part of Session One ‘How to limit variables of power, privilege and difference’.Display full sizeFigure 8. Participants moving together in a circle part of Session Four ‘How to extend healing to wider community’.Display full sizeAdditional informationFundingSouth African funders: National Arts Council; National Research Foundation; Oppenheimer Memorial Trust; Water Research Commission; Department of Environment Affairs – Natural Resources Management Programme and United Kingdom funders: Common Thread and Santander.Notes on contributorsAthina CopterosAthina Copteros is a dance movement psychotherapist and transdisciplinary environmental researcher. Athina works at the art-science-embodiment interface, focusing on human and more-than-human environmental relations. Her work is trauma informed and draws on transpersonal psychotherapy, the discipline of authentic movement, embodiment, enactment and the phenomenological standpoint of interconnectedness.Vicky KarkouVicky Karkou is the Director of the Research Centre for Arts and Wellbeing at Edge Hill University, a dance movement psychotherapist and an internationally known academic and researcher in arts and health and arts psychotherapies. Her research has received external funding of over 5 million from the funding bodies such as the ESRC, AHRC, NIHR and the Arts Council, the Wellcome Trust. She has recently published her fifth book and has over 100 publications in peer reviewed journals.Carolyn Gay PalmerCarolyn Gay Palmer is an Emeritus Professor in the Institute for Water Research, and the African Research Universities Water Centre of Excellence, at Rhodes university, South Africa. 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Experiencing principles of dance movement therapy practice within transdisciplinary environmental research in South Africa
AbstractThis research study is an initial exploration of ways in which principles of dance movement therapy practice can be used in South Africa. Culturally-relevant principles in dance movement therapy practice were identified in an earlier phase of the study and informed a short-term group intervention within a transdisciplinary research team that dealt with water resources management. The research question for this phase of the study focused on the experiences of members of this group: How did researchers from a water resources management transdisciplinary environmental research group program in South Africa experience their participation in a group that adopted selected, culturally-sensitive dance movement therapy principles and practices? Hermeneutic phenomenology provided the methodological framing. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis influenced the identification of themes. We conclude that principles of dance movement therapy have relevance in multiple and diverse ways within environmental transdisciplinary teams, beyond typical therapy contexts.Keywords: Dance movement therapy/psychotherapyecopsychologycomplex social-ecological systemstransdisciplinaritywater resources managementcommunity engagementtraumaembodiment Author contributionsAll authors contributed to the final approval of the paper.Disclosure statementTwo of the three co-authors are qualified and registered dance movement therapists in their respective countries of residency. The Institute for Water Researcher’s Ethics Committee approved the research.Figure 6. Participants created this sand tray from items of nature as well as the animal that symbolic represented each one of them as part of a free moving experience during Session Four ‘How to extend healing to wider community’.Display full sizeFigure 7. Participants mirroring each other’s movements in the circle part of Session One ‘How to limit variables of power, privilege and difference’.Display full sizeFigure 8. Participants moving together in a circle part of Session Four ‘How to extend healing to wider community’.Display full sizeAdditional informationFundingSouth African funders: National Arts Council; National Research Foundation; Oppenheimer Memorial Trust; Water Research Commission; Department of Environment Affairs – Natural Resources Management Programme and United Kingdom funders: Common Thread and Santander.Notes on contributorsAthina CopterosAthina Copteros is a dance movement psychotherapist and transdisciplinary environmental researcher. Athina works at the art-science-embodiment interface, focusing on human and more-than-human environmental relations. Her work is trauma informed and draws on transpersonal psychotherapy, the discipline of authentic movement, embodiment, enactment and the phenomenological standpoint of interconnectedness.Vicky KarkouVicky Karkou is the Director of the Research Centre for Arts and Wellbeing at Edge Hill University, a dance movement psychotherapist and an internationally known academic and researcher in arts and health and arts psychotherapies. Her research has received external funding of over 5 million from the funding bodies such as the ESRC, AHRC, NIHR and the Arts Council, the Wellcome Trust. She has recently published her fifth book and has over 100 publications in peer reviewed journals.Carolyn Gay PalmerCarolyn Gay Palmer is an Emeritus Professor in the Institute for Water Research, and the African Research Universities Water Centre of Excellence, at Rhodes university, South Africa. Her research field encompasses transdisciplinary approaches to social-ecological justice and well-being.
期刊介绍:
Body, Movement and Dance in Psychotherapy is an international, peer-reviewed journal exploring the relationship between body and mind and focusing on the significance of the body and movement in the therapeutic setting. It is the only scholarly journal wholly dedicated to the growing fields of body (somatic) psychotherapy and dance movement therapy. The body is increasingly being recognized as a vehicle for expression, insight and change. The journal encourages broad and in-depth discussion of issues relating to research activities, theory, clinical practice, professional development and personal reflections.