The Developmental Theory of Embodiment

2018 ◽  
pp. 76-89
Author(s):  
Heather L. Jacobson ◽  
M. Elizabeth Lewis Hall
2015 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
Heather L. Jacobson ◽  
M. Elizabeth Lewis Hall ◽  
Tamara L. Anderson ◽  
Michele M. Willingham

Author(s):  
Niva Piran

Abstract In this chapter, Piran engages with girls at puberty through their narrated experiences of embodied connections to the physical and social world during menarche. Utilizing the theoretical frame of the Developmental Theory of Embodiment (Piran in Journeys of Embodiment at the Intersection of Body and Culture: The Developmental Theory of Embodiment, 2017), Piran focuses on experiences in three domains. First, she shows that girls’ temporary freedom of engagement in the physical territory alongside boys ends at menarche, compromising embodied joy, agency, and positive connection to the physical environment. Second, she examines how strongly enforced ‘femininity’-related discourses at menarche, which are further imposed by menstruation-related discourses, corset the way girls can inhabit their bodies. Third, Piran argues that menarche is a biological event that is associated with embodied demotion in social power and with disrupting relational networks. She concludes that positive embodiment at menarche depends on the availability of relational connections and norms that can counteract these adverse social experiences.


This chapter reviews the developmental theory of embodiment, which is an integrated, research-based social theory that aims to predict, through the delineation of both protective and risk factors, the quality of embodied lives among girls and women across the life span. According to the theory, social experiences shape girls’ and women’s quality of embodied lives via three core pathways: the physical domain, the mental domain of social discourses and expectations, and the social power and relational connections domain. Each of these domains includes protective (and risk) factors: physical freedom (vs. corseting), mental freedom (vs. corseting also), and social power and relational connections (vs. disempowerment and disconnection). This chapter explicates these domains and their corresponding protective and risk factors. The developmental theory of embodiment has implications to a range of health promotion interventions and to constructive social transformations, which are discussed in this chapter.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (12) ◽  
pp. 40-54
Author(s):  
Jamie B. Boster ◽  
Joann P. Benigno ◽  
John W. McCarthy

Innovations in technology have resulted in increased use of tablets, mobile devices, and applications as augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) systems for children with complex communication needs (CCN). Although research has been conducted on the specific characteristics of AAC technologies, many interfaces remain replications of prior communication devices with little consideration of the features of newer platforms. A greater concern is that these interfaces may not be based on empirical evidence or derived from key developmental language theories. As such, these interfaces may place additional demands on children with CCN instead of supporting their development of language content, form, and use. The purpose of this paper is to discuss potential interface supports for AAC systems that capitalize on current technologies and draw upon key tenets of developmental theory.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document