Art as a Spiritual Expression for Indigenous Well-being

abstract: Art is a form of spiritual expression that is thriving in many Indigenous cultures. It can take many forms, meanings and have a multitude of emotional, mental, physical and spiritual effects on its creator as well as its audience. Amongst American Indians, art has been a method for maintai...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Robbins, Marlena Candace (Author)
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
art
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51656
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-516562019-02-02T03:01:10Z Art as a Spiritual Expression for Indigenous Well-being abstract: Art is a form of spiritual expression that is thriving in many Indigenous cultures. It can take many forms, meanings and have a multitude of emotional, mental, physical and spiritual effects on its creator as well as its audience. Amongst American Indians, art has been a method for maintaining holistic well-being intended to heal and cope with traumatic experiences. In this thesis, I examine the western societal and cultural influences that have led to the loss of cultural identity and examine approaches and practices that aim to re-establish a resilient connection to identity and well-being using art as a spiritual catalyst. Literary research and articles were reviewed related to the issue of art as a form of spiritual expression in Indigenous cultures. An autoethnography was conducted with the intent to record and reflect on the well-being of the researcher in relation to her artistic expression. Journaling and vlogging were used as research methods and painting, sketching, and beading was used as artistic methods. Over the course of six months, over 50 videos with 30 hours of raw footage were recorded; averaging 2 hours per day. The results are reflected in the researchers free-flowing and emotionally driven reflection of experiences that have driven her artwork. This thesis supports the establishment of art as a form of spiritual expression for transforming the current western focused health care paradigm to one that recognizes, values and employs Indigenous insight, methodologies, worldviews, culture and spirituality. Dissertation/Thesis Robbins, Marlena Candace (Author) Romero-Little, Eunice (Advisor) Marley, Tennille L (Committee member) Meders, Jacob (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Native American studies art creative expression Indigenous spirituality wellbeing eng 68 pages Masters Thesis American Indian Studies 2018 Masters Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51656 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2018
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Native American studies
art
creative
expression
Indigenous
spirituality
wellbeing
spellingShingle Native American studies
art
creative
expression
Indigenous
spirituality
wellbeing
Art as a Spiritual Expression for Indigenous Well-being
description abstract: Art is a form of spiritual expression that is thriving in many Indigenous cultures. It can take many forms, meanings and have a multitude of emotional, mental, physical and spiritual effects on its creator as well as its audience. Amongst American Indians, art has been a method for maintaining holistic well-being intended to heal and cope with traumatic experiences. In this thesis, I examine the western societal and cultural influences that have led to the loss of cultural identity and examine approaches and practices that aim to re-establish a resilient connection to identity and well-being using art as a spiritual catalyst. Literary research and articles were reviewed related to the issue of art as a form of spiritual expression in Indigenous cultures. An autoethnography was conducted with the intent to record and reflect on the well-being of the researcher in relation to her artistic expression. Journaling and vlogging were used as research methods and painting, sketching, and beading was used as artistic methods. Over the course of six months, over 50 videos with 30 hours of raw footage were recorded; averaging 2 hours per day. The results are reflected in the researchers free-flowing and emotionally driven reflection of experiences that have driven her artwork. This thesis supports the establishment of art as a form of spiritual expression for transforming the current western focused health care paradigm to one that recognizes, values and employs Indigenous insight, methodologies, worldviews, culture and spirituality. === Dissertation/Thesis === Masters Thesis American Indian Studies 2018
author2 Robbins, Marlena Candace (Author)
author_facet Robbins, Marlena Candace (Author)
title Art as a Spiritual Expression for Indigenous Well-being
title_short Art as a Spiritual Expression for Indigenous Well-being
title_full Art as a Spiritual Expression for Indigenous Well-being
title_fullStr Art as a Spiritual Expression for Indigenous Well-being
title_full_unstemmed Art as a Spiritual Expression for Indigenous Well-being
title_sort art as a spiritual expression for indigenous well-being
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.51656
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