Conscious Dance Practices/Authentic Movement/sv: Difference between revisions

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Authentic Movement uppstod i mitten av 1900-talet genom arbetet av '''Mary Starks Whitehouse''', en dansare och jungiansk analytiker. Whitehouse hämtade influenser från modern dans, djuppsykologi och aktiv fantasi och utvecklade en praktik som kopplade samman omedvetet material, rörelse och medveten medvetenhet.
Authentic Movement uppstod i mitten av 1900-talet genom arbetet av '''Mary Starks Whitehouse''', en dansare och jungiansk analytiker. Whitehouse hämtade influenser från modern dans, djuppsykologi och aktiv fantasi och utvecklade en praktik som kopplade samman omedvetet material, rörelse och medveten medvetenhet.


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Hennes arbete vidareutvecklades och fördes vidare av senare utövare, inklusive '''Janet Adler''', som formulerade Authentic Movement som en formell disciplin med etiska grunder, tydligt språk och långsiktiga utbildningsvägar.
Her work was further developed and transmitted by later practitioners, including '''Janet Adler''', who articulated Authentic Movement as a formal discipline with ethical foundations, clear language, and long-term training pathways.
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Revision as of 08:03, 15 February 2026


Authentic Movement är en kontemplativ rörelsepraktik fokuserad på kroppslig medvetenhet, inre lyssnande och relationellt bevittnande. Den kännetecknas av spontan rörelse som uppstår ur inre impulser, praktiserad inom en tydligt definierad behållare som inkluderar rollerna som rörelseperson och vittne.

Authentic Movement utövas internationellt i terapeutiska, pedagogiska, konstnärliga och kontemplativa sammanhang. Det beskrivs ofta som en disciplin snarare än en dansform, där medvetenhet, närvaro och meningsskapande betonas framför performance eller estetiskt resultat.

Ursprung

Authentic Movement uppstod i mitten av 1900-talet genom arbetet av Mary Starks Whitehouse, en dansare och jungiansk analytiker. Whitehouse hämtade influenser från modern dans, djuppsykologi och aktiv fantasi och utvecklade en praktik som kopplade samman omedvetet material, rörelse och medveten medvetenhet.

Hennes arbete vidareutvecklades och fördes vidare av senare utövare, inklusive Janet Adler, som formulerade Authentic Movement som en formell disciplin med etiska grunder, tydligt språk och långsiktiga utbildningsvägar.

Core principles

Authentic Movement is grounded in several core principles:

  • Inner impulse — movement arises from sensation, image, emotion, or impulse perceived internally.
  • Presence — sustained attention to lived experience in the moment.
  • Witnessing — a non-judgemental, receptive presence that observes movement without interpretation.
  • Differentiation — cultivating awareness of boundaries between self and other, mover and witness.
  • Integration — reflecting on experience through language and meaning after movement.

The practice prioritises direct experience and reflection over instruction or technique.

Practice

A typical Authentic Movement session involves:

  • one or more movers who close their eyes and follow internal impulses into movement,
  • one or more witnesses who maintain a grounded, attentive presence,
  • a period of verbal reflection following the movement phase.

Movers do not plan or choreograph movement. Instead, they attend to bodily sensations, emotions, memories, and imagery as they arise. Witnesses observe with restraint, cultivating awareness of their own responses while refraining from interpretation or intervention.

Sessions may be practiced one-to-one, in small groups, or within long-term practice groups.

The role of the witness

The role of the witness is central to Authentic Movement. Witnessing involves:

  • tracking the mover without judgement,
  • maintaining awareness of one’s own sensations and projections,
  • supporting safety, containment, and clarity of the practice space.

Over time, practitioners may develop the capacity to witness both others and themselves simultaneously, sometimes described as the inner witness.

Language and reflection

Following movement, participants often engage in spoken reflection. Language is used carefully and intentionally, typically emphasising:

  • first-person statements,
  • descriptions of direct experience,
  • differentiation between observation, feeling, and interpretation.

This reflective phase supports integration of embodied experience into conscious awareness.

Training and transmission

Authentic Movement is transmitted through long-term study rather than standardised certification. Training pathways may include:

  • sustained personal practice,
  • supervised practice groups,
  • mentorship and apprenticeship,
  • study of ethics, boundaries, and psychological awareness.

Some organisations and teachers describe Authentic Movement explicitly as a discipline, emphasising responsibility, containment, and ethical clarity.

Applications

Authentic Movement is used in a range of contexts, including:

  • psychotherapy and counselling,
  • dance and movement education,
  • somatic and expressive arts practice,
  • contemplative and spiritual inquiry,
  • creative and performance research.

Relationship to conscious dance

Authentic Movement is closely related to the conscious dance field through its emphasis on awareness, embodiment, and non-judgement. It differs from many conscious dance practices in its minimal use of music, absence of group dance structures, and strong focus on witnessing and reflection.

It has significantly influenced later movement meditation practices, somatic psychology, and embodied contemplative disciplines.

External links