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Pleasure and time in senior dance: bringing temporality into focus in the field of ageing

Population ageing and discourses on healthy ageing have led to a growing interest in social dancing for seniors. While senior dance has been described as both common and contributing to good health, the fundamental connection between bodily and temporal dimensions has been fairly neglected. As a res...

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Published in:Ageing and society 2022-02, Vol.42 (2), p.432-447
Main Author: Krekula, Clary
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description Population ageing and discourses on healthy ageing have led to a growing interest in social dancing for seniors. While senior dance has been described as both common and contributing to good health, the fundamental connection between bodily and temporal dimensions has been fairly neglected. As a result, there is a risk of portraying dance among older adults as a general practice, while at the same time the senior dance's potential to shed light on relations between temporality and ageing is not utilised. Based on qualitative interviews with 25 women and eight men, aged 52–81, in Sweden, whose main leisure activity was dancing, this article sheds light on this knowledge gap by illustrating the pleasurable experiences of senior dance. The results illustrate that the pleasurable experiences of dancing can be understood as three different experiences of temporality: embodied experience of extended present, an interaction with synchronised transcending subjectivities and age identities with unbroken temporality. The results also highlight the central role that temporal aspects play in processes around subjectivities in later life, as well as the close connection between ageing embodiment and temporality. They also illustrate the ability of dance to create wellbeing, not only through its physical elements, but also through the sociality that constitutes the core of dancing. In light of these results, the article argues that the temporal processes relate to individuals’ diverse relationship with the world and that they therefore play a central role in subjective experiences of ageing.
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); Politics Collection; Social Science Premium Collection (Proquest) (PQ_SDU_P3); Sociology Collection; Cambridge University Press; Sociological Abstracts
subjects adult
affective observation
Age groups
aged
Aging
Belly dancing
clinical article
critical age studies
Dance
dance in later life
Dancing
Discourses
embodied relatedness
embodied temporality
Embodiment
embodiment and ageing
extended now
female
General practice
human
human experiment
Identity
interview
Leisure
male
middle aged
Older people
Pleasure
Recreation
Social Work
Socialt arbete
Sociologi
Sociology
Subjective experiences
Sweden
Temporal processing
Time
time and temporality
Well being
wellbeing
title Pleasure and time in senior dance: bringing temporality into focus in the field of ageing
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