Connecting Us Back to Ourselves: Aesthetic Experience as a Means to Growth after Trauma

Author:

Bennett Jill12ORCID,Kenning Gail12ORCID,Wobcke Marianne1,Gitau Lydia12

Affiliation:

1. Big Anxiety Research Centre (BARC), University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia

2. fEEL-felt Experience & Empathy Lab., School of Art & Design, University of New South Wales, Kensington, NSW 2052, Australia

Abstract

This article examines the experience and effects of a trauma-responsive program that uses creative methods to address the ongoing psychosocial impacts of transgenerational trauma and youth suicide, which disproportionately affect First Nations people in Australia. Our aim is to understand how the aesthetic (sensory-affective) dimensions of such a program serve to promote experiences of growth after trauma, manifesting in a sense of connection to both self and community. The paper focuses on the second of two immersive, experiential workshops delivered seven months apart in the regional town of Warwick in Queensland, Australia. In the light of self-reports of growth and personal transformation following the initial workshop, the paper examines the key drivers of such growth, focusing in particular on how trauma-related experience is metabolised through cultural containment. It builds on Bion’s concept of container/contained, combining analysis of the affordances of immersion. Framed in cultural rather than medical terms, the larger goal of the paper is to establish how cultural programs fill a gap in trauma informed support, facilitating the processing of trauma.

Funder

Australian Government’s Research Council

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Social Sciences

Reference31 articles.

1. Trauma and psychoanalysis: Freud, Bion, and Mitchell;Alford;Psychoanalysis, Culture & Society,2018

2. Article One and The Big Anxiety (2023, September 19). Changing Our Ways [Film]. Australia. Available online: https://www.unsw.edu.au/news/2023/10/arts-festival-brings-healing-to-a-town-impacted-by-suicide.

3. Atkinson, Judy (2002). Trauma trails, recreating song lines: The transgenerational effects of trauma in indigenous Australia, Spinifex Press.

4. Beyond doer and done to: An intersubjective view of thirdness;Benjamin;Psychoanal Q,2004

5. Bennett, Jill, and Zournazi, Mary (2019). Thinking in the World: A Reader, Bloomsbury.

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