Literature DB >> 30336101

Integrating Citizenship, Embodiment, and Relationality: Towards a Reconceptualization of Dance and Dementia in Long-Term Care.

Pia Kontos1, Alisa Grigorovich1.   

Abstract

Dance, as aesthetic self-expression, is a unique arts-based program that combines the physical benefits of exercise with psychosocial therapeutic benefits. While dance has also been shown to support empowerment, meaningful self-expression, and pleasurable experience, it is rarely adopted to support these aspects of engagement in the context of dementia care. The instrumental reduction of dance to its application as a therapeutic tool can be traced to the contemporary movement towards cognitive science with an emphasis on embodied cognition. This has effectively elided a consideration of how the body itself, separate and apart from cognition, could be a source of intelligibility, inventiveness, and creativity. We argue for the need to broaden the therapeutic model of dance to more fully support embodied and creative self-expression by persons living with dementia. To achieve this, we explore how a relational model of citizenship that recognizes corporeality and relationality as fundamental to human existence brings a new and critical dimension to understanding the importance of dance in the context of dementia. Drawing on this model, we articulate a new kind of ethic characterized by a pre-reflective intercorporeal sensibility that requires the mobilization of public structures and practices to cultivate a relational environment for individuals living with dementia that supports human flourishing.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30336101     DOI: 10.1177/1073110518804233

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Law Med Ethics        ISSN: 1073-1105            Impact factor:   1.718


  4 in total

1.  Relational, Flexible, Everyday: Learning from Ethics in Dementia Research.

Authors:  James Hodge; Sarah Foley; Rens Brankaert; Gail Kenning; Amanda Lazar; Jennifer Boger; Kellie Morrissey
Journal:  Proc SIGCHI Conf Hum Factor Comput Syst       Date:  2020-04

Review 2.  Conceptualizing citizenship in dementia: A scoping review of the literature.

Authors:  Deborah O'Connor; Mariko Sakamoto; Kishore Seetharaman; Habib Chaudhury; Alison Phinney
Journal:  Dementia (London)       Date:  2022-06-29

3.  The aesthetic, artistic and creative contributions of dance for health and wellbeing across the lifecourse: a systematic review.

Authors:  Kerry Chappell; Emma Redding; Ursula Crickmay; Rebecca Stancliffe; Veronica Jobbins; Sue Smith
Journal:  Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being       Date:  2021-12

4.  Free to be: Experiences of arts-based relational caring in a community living and thriving with dementia.

Authors:  Christine Jonas-Simpson; Gail Mitchell; Sherry Dupuis; Lesley Donovan; Pia Kontos
Journal:  Dementia (London)       Date:  2021-06-24
  4 in total

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