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This essay takes the reader into a synesthetic landscape to explore the possibility of relating with trees as intimate companions of movement and becoming. David Abram’s ecophenomenology of perception is brought into dialogue with Kimerer LaMothe’s philosophy of dance and with other voices in the growing interdisciplinary field of ecosomatics. Based on the author’s inquiries as dancer-researcher, encounters with trees are staged as slow improvisational rituals of listening and attunement. In opening the senses and the imagination to the presence of trees, ecosomatic practice exposes the porosity and permeability of bodily boundaries and reveals the possibility of a perceptual shift into a heightened experience of embodiment. We are not only touching, witnessing, and dancing with trees, we are also being touched, witnessed, and danced by them. In these in-between spaces the soma is reached sensorially by ecological wounds and dance is reclaimed as a healing force.
http://ecopsychology-journal.eu/index.php
reciprocity, touch, with-ness, ecology of perception, ecosomatics, dance, ecological wounds, co-healing, soma, bodily earthly ground
reciprocity, touch, with-ness, ecology of perception, ecosomatics, dance, ecological wounds, co-healing, soma, bodily earthly ground
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