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El. knyga: Performance and Dementia: A Cultural Response to Care

  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Jan-2021
  • Leidėjas: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030510770
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Jan-2021
  • Leidėjas: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030510770

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This book explores how theatre and performance can change the way we think about dementia and some of the environments in which dementia care takes place. Drawing on the author’s creative practice and other performance projects in the UK, it explores some of the challenges and opportunities of making performance in care homes. Rather than focusing on the transformative potential of the arts, it asks how artists can engage with the different types of relationships that exist in a care community. These include the relationships that residents and staff have with each other as well as relationships with care spaces. Exploring the intersection between participatory performance and the everyday creativity of a care home, it argues that the arts have a cultural role to play in supporting dementia care as a relational practice. Moreover, it celebrates the intrinsic creativity of caregiving and how principles and practices of care work can inform theatre and performance in diverse ways.

1 Introduction: Performance, Creativity and Care
1(16)
Working with the System
1(4)
Defining Performance
5(2)
Interdisciplinary Connections
7(2)
Overview of This Book
9(5)
References
14(3)
Part I A Cultural Response
17(72)
2 A Cultural Response to Dementia: Moving Beyond the Wellbeing Agenda
19(16)
Caring Values
19(4)
The Problem with Wellbeing
23(7)
Creativity and Relationality
30(1)
References
31(4)
3 Performative Responses and Dementia-Friendly Theatre
35(28)
`A Multiplicity of Selves': Melanie Wilson's Autobiographer
39(3)
The Aesthetics of Remembering and Forgetting: Platform 4's Memory Point(s)
42(4)
Dementia-Friendly Theatre
46(6)
Every Third Minute Festival
52(5)
Environmental Adaptations
57(4)
References
61(2)
4 A Relational Approach to Dementia Care
63(26)
Relationship-Centred Care and Embodied Selfhood
67(5)
Environmental Aspects of Care
72(3)
Participatory Performance and Relational Dementia Care
75(4)
Objects and Improvisation
79(4)
Bringing the Weather Indoors
83(3)
References
86(3)
Part II Performance and the Care Environment
89(110)
5 `A Poetics of Sound': Towards an Aural Re-imagining of a Care Home Dining Room
91(24)
Exploring Everyday Sound
93(3)
The Care Home Soundscape
96(3)
Sound, Listening and Material Imagination
99(5)
Sounding Place
104(3)
Musical Sound, Sonorous Bodies
107(3)
Indoor Climates
110(3)
References
113(2)
6 Negotiating Space through Taste
115(26)
A Homely Effect
116(1)
Familiar Objects
117(4)
Objects and Care Work
121(4)
Taste beyond Nostalgia
125(4)
Taste and Social Networks
129(7)
Positive Divergence
136(3)
References
139(2)
7 Taking Care: A Methodology for Collaboration
141(28)
Finding the Sense of a Beginning
144(1)
Creativity in Everyday Life
145(2)
Television and Homemaking
147(1)
Sleeping and Social Retreat
148(2)
The Creativity of Care
150(4)
Tactile Engagements
154(2)
Paying Attention
156(7)
Embracing Slowness: `The Social Aesthetics of Pace'
163(3)
References
166(3)
8 A Caring Effect
169(24)
Working with Care Professionals: Supporting Differential Knowledge
171(2)
Embedded Practice
173(2)
Virtual Learning
175(2)
Carers as Performers: Turning a Little Further
177(14)
References
191(2)
9 Conclusion
193(6)
References 199(2)
Postscript. A Cultural Response to Care after Covid-19 201(4)
Index 205
Nicky Hatton is a theatre practitioner and researcher who specialises in performance and health. Her current research explores care as a critical and creative concern in participatory performance. She has worked extensively in health and care settings and has over 12 years experience of leading community performance projects. She is a lecturer in Drama at York St John University, UK, and a fellow of the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust.