Re-touche

Creativity and affect in families with a family member, who is labelled as disabled, is central in this article. These families are often pinned down to individual, closed categories where everything revolves around the label “disability.” Our research goes beyond binary thinking in terms of ab...

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Main Authors: Marieke Vandecasteele, Elisabeth De Schauwer, Inge Blockmans, Geert Van Hove
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2021-09-01
Series:Art/Research International
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/ari/index.php/ari/article/view/29568
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spelling doaj-bf6d7b1a0ff24e51a53e5706a1bcdff02021-09-11T22:54:16ZengUniversity of AlbertaArt/Research International2371-37712021-09-016210.18432/ari29568Re-toucheMarieke Vandecasteele0Elisabeth De Schauwer1Inge Blockmans2Geert Van Hove3Special Needs Eduction Ghent UniversitySpecial Needs Education Ghent UniversitySpecial Needs Education Ghent UniversitySpecial Needs Education Ghent University Creativity and affect in families with a family member, who is labelled as disabled, is central in this article. These families are often pinned down to individual, closed categories where everything revolves around the label “disability.” Our research goes beyond binary thinking in terms of abled/disabled and other linear explanations by using artistic processes as ethnography. We start from encounters between two people who both created something about their “non-ordinary” brothers. One (first author) made a shortfilm/documentary about her own family, the other (research participant) wrote a TV series about a man who takes care of his brother after their mother’s death, which was not autobiographical yet inspired by his own experiences. The first author distilled etchings from their encounters, which piece together different layers: the scenarist’s biographical story, the story of creating the series, the series’ script and the first author’s thoughts and readings. The concept of re-touche—of touching and being touched, and in this way returning to family fissures and creating something new from them—runs through this art-based project. https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/ari/index.php/ari/article/view/29568arts-based researchsiblingsdisability labelfamily fissurescreatingaffect
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marieke Vandecasteele
Elisabeth De Schauwer
Inge Blockmans
Geert Van Hove
spellingShingle Marieke Vandecasteele
Elisabeth De Schauwer
Inge Blockmans
Geert Van Hove
Re-touche
Art/Research International
arts-based research
siblings
disability label
family fissures
creating
affect
author_facet Marieke Vandecasteele
Elisabeth De Schauwer
Inge Blockmans
Geert Van Hove
author_sort Marieke Vandecasteele
title Re-touche
title_short Re-touche
title_full Re-touche
title_fullStr Re-touche
title_full_unstemmed Re-touche
title_sort re-touche
publisher University of Alberta
series Art/Research International
issn 2371-3771
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Creativity and affect in families with a family member, who is labelled as disabled, is central in this article. These families are often pinned down to individual, closed categories where everything revolves around the label “disability.” Our research goes beyond binary thinking in terms of abled/disabled and other linear explanations by using artistic processes as ethnography. We start from encounters between two people who both created something about their “non-ordinary” brothers. One (first author) made a shortfilm/documentary about her own family, the other (research participant) wrote a TV series about a man who takes care of his brother after their mother’s death, which was not autobiographical yet inspired by his own experiences. The first author distilled etchings from their encounters, which piece together different layers: the scenarist’s biographical story, the story of creating the series, the series’ script and the first author’s thoughts and readings. The concept of re-touche—of touching and being touched, and in this way returning to family fissures and creating something new from them—runs through this art-based project.
topic arts-based research
siblings
disability label
family fissures
creating
affect
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/ari/index.php/ari/article/view/29568
work_keys_str_mv AT mariekevandecasteele retouche
AT elisabethdeschauwer retouche
AT ingeblockmans retouche
AT geertvanhove retouche
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