This presentation aims to discuss aspects of the fitting room situation from two theoretical perspectives; communities of practice and the ambiguity of touch (touching, being touched). The theoretical frame is intertwined with reflections form my own practice as designer/maker/educator/researcher and from discussions/interviews with colleagues and students from different disciplines at The Danish National School of Performing Arts and colleagues from the Danish theater industry. The educational theorist and practitioner Etienne Wenger describes communities of practice as “groups of people who share a concern or a passion for something they do and learn how to do it better as they interact regularly” (Wenger, 2004). Using the knowledge of We...
Touch, as it is conventionally conceived, appears to be lacking in Japanese intimate relationships. ...
Abstract This article focuses on the stories that practitioners tell about the touch in the context ...
AbstractPrema Purigali Prabhakar"How Skin Can See:" A Phenomenological and Cultural Account of Touch...
This paper analyses talk and touch in interaction in a musical masterclass setting. It shows how seq...
[About the book] Given that touch and touching is so central to everyday embodied existence, why ...
This paper explores how touch is key to understanding education--not as an achievement or an instrum...
In this chapter we offer a creative account of the exhibition Where knowing and not knowing touch (S...
In peer interactions within educational settings, students touch each other to display affection, to...
This diploma is devided into two major parts. Theoretical and practical. In the theoretical part I c...
The article examines the resonance of a particular quality of touch identified, with reference to th...
This chapter explores the cultural meanings of touch as applied to certain movement practices involv...
Why to use touch? Because it is one of our senses. As such, it contributes to the holistic perceptio...
The authors argue that TOUCH is an essential ingredient for intimate engagement with the materials. ...
The authors argue that TOUCH is an essential ingredient for intimate engagement with the materials. ...
This talk begins with a proposition – that we abandon the study of ‘touch’. I argue that recent mo...
Touch, as it is conventionally conceived, appears to be lacking in Japanese intimate relationships. ...
Abstract This article focuses on the stories that practitioners tell about the touch in the context ...
AbstractPrema Purigali Prabhakar"How Skin Can See:" A Phenomenological and Cultural Account of Touch...
This paper analyses talk and touch in interaction in a musical masterclass setting. It shows how seq...
[About the book] Given that touch and touching is so central to everyday embodied existence, why ...
This paper explores how touch is key to understanding education--not as an achievement or an instrum...
In this chapter we offer a creative account of the exhibition Where knowing and not knowing touch (S...
In peer interactions within educational settings, students touch each other to display affection, to...
This diploma is devided into two major parts. Theoretical and practical. In the theoretical part I c...
The article examines the resonance of a particular quality of touch identified, with reference to th...
This chapter explores the cultural meanings of touch as applied to certain movement practices involv...
Why to use touch? Because it is one of our senses. As such, it contributes to the holistic perceptio...
The authors argue that TOUCH is an essential ingredient for intimate engagement with the materials. ...
The authors argue that TOUCH is an essential ingredient for intimate engagement with the materials. ...
This talk begins with a proposition – that we abandon the study of ‘touch’. I argue that recent mo...
Touch, as it is conventionally conceived, appears to be lacking in Japanese intimate relationships. ...
Abstract This article focuses on the stories that practitioners tell about the touch in the context ...
AbstractPrema Purigali Prabhakar"How Skin Can See:" A Phenomenological and Cultural Account of Touch...