Art as neuronarrative of liminal experience

<p>Abstract ART AS NEURONARRATIVE IN LIMINAL EXPERIENCE Brenda Elliott Saybrook University This study used arts-based and narrative inquiry to explore how artists express subjectively felt liminal experience in the process of art-making. The term liminal comes from the Latin limen, meaning thr...

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Main Author: Elliott, Brenda
Language:EN
Published: Saybrook University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10009148
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spelling ndltd-PROQUEST-oai-pqdtoai.proquest.com-100091482016-02-18T04:23:19Z Art as neuronarrative of liminal experience Elliott, Brenda Neurosciences <p>Abstract ART AS NEURONARRATIVE IN LIMINAL EXPERIENCE Brenda Elliott Saybrook University This study used arts-based and narrative inquiry to explore how artists express subjectively felt liminal experience in the process of art-making. The term liminal comes from the Latin limen, meaning threshold, and can be defined as an in-between, limbo, or suspension between two more relatively stable states in persons, places, or things. Transition through the liminal state contains the potential of change. Although the process of change within the human experience has been widely studied, the mechanisms of change, the means by which change occurs, has received relatively little attention. Fourteen artists were interviewed about their use of art as a means to deal with what they have felt to be liminal experiences. Interviews included direct observation of the artwork, descriptions of the art process, reports of subjective experience of art-making, the artist's writing and journaling of the art process, and the context of the art-making within the life of the participant. The interviewed focused on two main topics: 1. The artist's subjective descriptions of the liminal experience, including his or her major concerns throughout the experience; 2. The artist's description of how he or she dealt with the experience of liminality through art-making and attempted to resolve those concerns. The comparative analysis technique of grounded theory was used to generate conceptual categories and their properties from evidence provided directly from interview data, to generate a basic social psychological process. For the artists interviewed, meaningful and satisfying self-creation was archived in their art process. Anticipatory platforming, the beginning of creation of renewed identity, emerged as a basic social psychological process. Anticipatory platforming finds its place within autopoeisis, the principle of self-generation of an organism as demonstrated in dynamical systems. The concept of anticipatory platforming may prove significant for psychotherapists who are challenged to find ways to support people dealing with change and uncertainty in an increasingly stressful world. It is proposed that an affectively attuned and body-based anticipatory platform facilitates a framework for a transformed self, through which the threshold of change is supported. Saybrook University 2016-02-17 00:00:00.0 thesis http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10009148 EN
collection NDLTD
language EN
sources NDLTD
topic Neurosciences
spellingShingle Neurosciences
Elliott, Brenda
Art as neuronarrative of liminal experience
description <p>Abstract ART AS NEURONARRATIVE IN LIMINAL EXPERIENCE Brenda Elliott Saybrook University This study used arts-based and narrative inquiry to explore how artists express subjectively felt liminal experience in the process of art-making. The term liminal comes from the Latin limen, meaning threshold, and can be defined as an in-between, limbo, or suspension between two more relatively stable states in persons, places, or things. Transition through the liminal state contains the potential of change. Although the process of change within the human experience has been widely studied, the mechanisms of change, the means by which change occurs, has received relatively little attention. Fourteen artists were interviewed about their use of art as a means to deal with what they have felt to be liminal experiences. Interviews included direct observation of the artwork, descriptions of the art process, reports of subjective experience of art-making, the artist's writing and journaling of the art process, and the context of the art-making within the life of the participant. The interviewed focused on two main topics: 1. The artist's subjective descriptions of the liminal experience, including his or her major concerns throughout the experience; 2. The artist's description of how he or she dealt with the experience of liminality through art-making and attempted to resolve those concerns. The comparative analysis technique of grounded theory was used to generate conceptual categories and their properties from evidence provided directly from interview data, to generate a basic social psychological process. For the artists interviewed, meaningful and satisfying self-creation was archived in their art process. Anticipatory platforming, the beginning of creation of renewed identity, emerged as a basic social psychological process. Anticipatory platforming finds its place within autopoeisis, the principle of self-generation of an organism as demonstrated in dynamical systems. The concept of anticipatory platforming may prove significant for psychotherapists who are challenged to find ways to support people dealing with change and uncertainty in an increasingly stressful world. It is proposed that an affectively attuned and body-based anticipatory platform facilitates a framework for a transformed self, through which the threshold of change is supported.
author Elliott, Brenda
author_facet Elliott, Brenda
author_sort Elliott, Brenda
title Art as neuronarrative of liminal experience
title_short Art as neuronarrative of liminal experience
title_full Art as neuronarrative of liminal experience
title_fullStr Art as neuronarrative of liminal experience
title_full_unstemmed Art as neuronarrative of liminal experience
title_sort art as neuronarrative of liminal experience
publisher Saybrook University
publishDate 2016
url http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=10009148
work_keys_str_mv AT elliottbrenda artasneuronarrativeofliminalexperience
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