Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

‘Withness’: Creative spectating for residents living with advanced dementia in care homes

View through CrossRef
Aiming to illustrate the potential for puppetry as a useful resource in dementia care, the authors argue unusually that play with puppets derives not particularly from drama or theatre, but fundamentally from the performative relationship people have with objects. The puppeteers of the study achieved remarkable emotional connection with care-home residents through an experience of puppetry, which dissolved the unitary autonomy of the puppet, recontextualizing it relationally as the puppeteer-with-puppet-with-spectator. It is this ‘withness’ that ignited the creative spark of presence of the residents. For a moment of trust and child-like joy kinaesthetic memories stirred in them, appearing to break down emotional barriers between the person and the world around them and indicating comparatively longer-term therapeutic benefits.
Title: ‘Withness’: Creative spectating for residents living with advanced dementia in care homes
Description:
Aiming to illustrate the potential for puppetry as a useful resource in dementia care, the authors argue unusually that play with puppets derives not particularly from drama or theatre, but fundamentally from the performative relationship people have with objects.
The puppeteers of the study achieved remarkable emotional connection with care-home residents through an experience of puppetry, which dissolved the unitary autonomy of the puppet, recontextualizing it relationally as the puppeteer-with-puppet-with-spectator.
It is this ‘withness’ that ignited the creative spark of presence of the residents.
For a moment of trust and child-like joy kinaesthetic memories stirred in them, appearing to break down emotional barriers between the person and the world around them and indicating comparatively longer-term therapeutic benefits.

Related Results

Family relationships and dementia: a synthesis of qualitative research including the person with dementia
Family relationships and dementia: a synthesis of qualitative research including the person with dementia
ABSTRACTFamily relationships are important for wellbeing across the lifecourse and are known to be important for people living with dementia, bringing benefits to self-esteem and i...
The Prevalence of Dementia in Europe and in Slovenia
The Prevalence of Dementia in Europe and in Slovenia
Dementia is becoming an increasingly important public health priority that will continue to increase due to the population aging and longevity. Appropriate national assessment of d...
The effectiveness of music as an intervention for dementia patients in acute settings
The effectiveness of music as an intervention for dementia patients in acute settings
In 2019 there were an estimated 50 million people living with dementia globally [1]. There is a strong need for therapies and interventions that ameliorate symptoms and improve qua...
The inter-relationship between formal and informal care: a study in France and Israel
The inter-relationship between formal and informal care: a study in France and Israel
ABSTRACTThis study examined whether formal care services delivered to frail older people's homes in France and Israel substitute for or complement informal support. The two countri...
An archaeology of dementia
An archaeology of dementia
Around the world, millions of people live with dementia. Archaeologists have advanced heritage engagement as a form of therapy, for example, through museum object handling. Here, t...
Designing with ‘direct democracy’
Designing with ‘direct democracy’
In the 1970s and ’80s residents and architects in Amsterdam worked together to shape the renewal of their neighbourhood. Working outside traditional planning constraints they initi...
They ‘don't cure old age’: older Ugandans’ delays to health-care access
They ‘don't cure old age’: older Ugandans’ delays to health-care access
ABSTRACTUganda's population is ageing, which comes with increased and varied burdens of disease and health-care needs. At the same time, gerontological care in Uganda remains negle...
From "Barefoot Doctor" to "Village Doctor" in Tiger Springs Village: A Case Study of Rural Health Care Transformations in Socialist China
From "Barefoot Doctor" to "Village Doctor" in Tiger Springs Village: A Case Study of Rural Health Care Transformations in Socialist China
During the 1970s, a wave of publications emerged in "the West" on the dramatic Cultural Revolution developments which were taking place in rural health care in the People's Republi...

Back to Top