Chapter 23. Dance/movement therapy with traumatized dissociative patients
In this chapter, we describe dissociation and dissociative identity disorder (DID) and the value of dance/movement therapy (DMT) with traumatized dissociative child and adult patients. Most patients with dissociative states have suffered trauma during childhood and have recurring traumatic memories, loss of time (dissociative amnesia), and physical stress (i.e., stress on the sensorimotor level often relieved by self-harm on the bodily level). In order to address trauma that occurred on the body level, we consider therapy on the body level to be an important part of a multidisciplinary approach. The first part of the chapter contains some general thoughts on the phenomenon of dissociation and how to address it in DMT. The second part of the chapter provides a case vignette of an abused child experiencing dissociation and five adult group therapy case vignettes in the context of a clinical DMT session designed to help DID patients. In the end, we present principles of movement therapy from work with dissociative children and adults.
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“Welcome to My Kingdom”: The Therapy Process between an Adolescent and a Dance Movement Therapist in Training.
Journal of Infant, Child, and Adolescent Psychotherapy 20:1
► pp. 15 ff.

Koch, Sabine C, Laura Mehl, Esther Sobanski, Maik Sieber & Thomas Fuchs
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Fixing the mirrors: A feasibility study of the effects of dance movement therapy on young adults with autism spectrum disorder.
Autism 19:3
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Koch, Sabine C.
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Empathieförderung durch Spiegeltechniken in der Tanz- und Bewegungstherapie. In
Trainings- und Interventionsprogramme zur Förderung von Empathie,
► pp. 157 ff.

Koch, Sabine C., Christine Caldwell & Thomas Fuchs
2013.
On body memory and embodied therapy.
Body, Movement and Dance in Psychotherapy 8:2
► pp. 82 ff.

Maiese, Michelle
2016.
Dissociative identity disorder and ambivalence.
Philosophical Explorations 19:3
► pp. 223 ff.

2016.
Affective Scaffolds, Expressive Arts, and Cognition.
Frontiers in Psychology 7

Payne, Helen, Tom Warnecke, Vicky Karkou & Gill Westland
2016.
A comparative analysis of body psychotherapy and dance movement psychotherapy from a European perspective.
Body, Movement and Dance in Psychotherapy 11:2-3
► pp. 144 ff.

Shuper Engelhard, Einat, Michal Pitluk & Michal Elboim-Gabyzon
2021.
Grounding the Connection Between Psyche and Soma: Creating a Reliable Observation Tool for Grounding Assessment in an Adult Population.
Frontiers in Psychology 12

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