Contact Improvisation as a Force for Expressive Reciprocity with Young Children Who Don't Speak

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Title: Contact Improvisation as a Force for Expressive Reciprocity with Young Children Who Don't Speak
Language: English
Authors: Dower, Ruth Churchill
Source: LEARNing Landscapes. Spr 2022 15(1):75-87.
Availability: LEARN (Leading English Education and Resource Network). 2030 Dagenais Blvd West, 2nd Floor, Laval Quebec H7L 5W2 Canada. Web site: https://learninglandscapes.ca/index.php/learnland
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 13
Publication Date: 2022
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Descriptive
Descriptors: Dance, Young Children, Speech Impairments, Kinesthetic Methods, Creative Activities, Intimacy, Self Expression
ISSN: 1913-5688
Abstract: Movement can be a powerful force for sensory connection and expression in young children who sometimes don't speak. Their kinaesthetic curiosity naturally experiments with--and forms spontaneous relationships through--touching, sensing, and moving-with the world around them. This article wonders what might happen if children's connective movements are invited through the speculative method of contact improvisation, not as an alternative to speech or way of interpreting meaning, but simply as a space for the transmission of forces, sensations, intimacy, and reciprocity. I consider what these shared forces or sensations of expression are that generate intimacy, joy, and reciprocity beyond words.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2022
Accession Number: EJ1348524
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:Movement can be a powerful force for sensory connection and expression in young children who sometimes don't speak. Their kinaesthetic curiosity naturally experiments with--and forms spontaneous relationships through--touching, sensing, and moving-with the world around them. This article wonders what might happen if children's connective movements are invited through the speculative method of contact improvisation, not as an alternative to speech or way of interpreting meaning, but simply as a space for the transmission of forces, sensations, intimacy, and reciprocity. I consider what these shared forces or sensations of expression are that generate intimacy, joy, and reciprocity beyond words.
ISSN:1913-5688