Imaginary dialogues: Witnessing in prison-based creative arts therapies

Publication date: Available online 5 August 2017 Source:The Arts in Psychotherapy Author(s): Adi Barak, Amy Stebbins This qualitative study examines the perspectives of US-American prisoners (N=21) on art-making and creative arts therapies in prison through the lens of ‘witnessing,’ that is, the empathic presence of an Other, who attends to the prisoner’s artistic testimony to affirm it as valid. Our analysis explores the concept of witnessing through the lens of constructivist, psychodynamic, and social justice perspectives. Our research questions delineate the specific kinds of dialogues into which prisoners wish to enter on the basis of their artistic production. Our results demonstrate that prisoners imagine three different kinds of witnesses to their art. We have labeled these: the witnessing crowd, the witnessing self, and the witnessing artist. By envisioning their art as a dialogue with these imaginary respondents, prisoners develop a fantasy of reintegration and societal acceptance. However, restrictions on prisoners’ access to these witnesses along with the demand that they rely on themselves as witnesses to their own art, raise questions about how the actual process of art-making in creative arts therapies might enhance alienation and marginalization of incarcerated persons. Our discussion contextualizes these findings within the broader critical perspective of social justice. Through this perspective we try to draw a nuanced and dialectical picture of ...
Source: Arts in Psychotherapy - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research
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