Pulsating and Listening from the Spiritual Pelvis: A Kaleidoscopic and Holistic Approach to Intuition, Identity and Ancestral Wisdom through the Body
Author: Francesca Matthys
Course:
MA Creative Practice
Year: 2021
Keywords:
Cultural identity,
Ethnography,
Nama Stap Dance,
Pelvis,
Somatics,
South Africa,
Abstract
Identities informed by dissolved [racial, cultural and artistic] histories often disrupt the direct connections to ancestral wisdoms and affect one’s lived experience of identity. Through an auto-ethnographic lens, this study proposed the term My Coloured, by investigating the South African, Coloured, female identifying body’s ability to connect to the past through hybridised somatic practices. The study, informed by spiritual and artistic practice, includes a compassionate yet rigorous studio practice encompassing somatic pelvis explorations, as a site that holds ancestral wisdoms, intuition and identity, as well as original adaptations of the Nama Stap Dance. The Nama people are the descents of the Khoisan of Southern Africa and this dance, part of the researcher’s known DNA lineage finds its origins in the Nama rite of passage ritual. The study sought to observe how one may connect to a sense of ancestral wisdom through acquired practices such as movement and spirituality, as well as an intuitive, idiosyncratic and eclectic approach to cultural practices that are part of one’s lineage, regardless of not having direct experience of them. Though the context of this research has been specific to the Coloured identifying female body, this developing practice aims to offer all individuals an opportunity to delve deeper into their nuanced ways of connecting to ancestry through the body. Thus it encourages alternative routes for exploring our ever-changing identities and an affirmation and validation within the self.
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Metadata
dc.contributor.author |
|
dc.date.accessioned |
2024-09-19 10:21 |
dc.date.copyright |
2021 |
dc.identifier.uri |
https://researchonline.trinitylaban.ac.uk/oa/thesis/?p=2764 |
dc.description.abstract |
Identities informed by dissolved [racial, cultural and artistic] histories often disrupt the direct connections to ancestral wisdoms and affect one’s lived experience of identity. Through an auto-ethnographic lens, this study proposed the term My Coloured, by investigating the South African, Coloured, female identifying body’s ability to connect to the past through hybridised somatic practices. The study, informed by spiritual and artistic practice, includes a compassionate yet rigorous studio practice encompassing somatic pelvis explorations, as a site that holds ancestral wisdoms, intuition and identity, as well as original adaptations of the Nama Stap Dance. The Nama people are the descents of the Khoisan of Southern Africa and this dance, part of the researcher’s known DNA lineage finds its origins in the Nama rite of passage ritual. The study sought to observe how one may connect to a sense of ancestral wisdom through acquired practices such as movement and spirituality, as well as an intuitive, idiosyncratic and eclectic approach to cultural practices that are part of one’s lineage, regardless of not having direct experience of them. Though the context of this research has been specific to the Coloured identifying female body, this developing practice aims to offer all individuals an opportunity to delve deeper into their nuanced ways of connecting to ancestry through the body. Thus it encourages alternative routes for exploring our ever-changing identities and an affirmation and validation within the self.
|
dc.language.iso |
EN |
dc.subject |
Cultural identity |
dc.subject |
Ethnography |
dc.subject |
Nama Stap Dance |
dc.subject |
Pelvis |
dc.subject |
Somatics |
dc.subject |
South Africa |
dc.title |
Pulsating and Listening from the Spiritual Pelvis: A Kaleidoscopic and Holistic Approach to Intuition, Identity and Ancestral Wisdom through the Body |
thesis.degree.name |
MA Creative Practice |
dc.date.updated |
2024-09-19 10:21
|
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dc.type
thesis.degree.level
dc.rights.accessrights
APA
Matthys, Francesca. (2021). Pulsating and Listening from the Spiritual Pelvis: A Kaleidoscopic and Holistic Approach to Intuition, Identity and Ancestral Wisdom through the Body (Masters’ theses). Retrieved https://researchonline.trinitylaban.ac.uk/oa/thesis/?p=2764