Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W826072303> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W826072303 startingPage "127" @default.
- W826072303 abstract "The problem of eating disorders has taken centre stage in recent years within helping professions and the larger public arena. The current diagnostic system (i.e., DSM-5; American Psychological Association, 2013) describes anorexia, bulimia, binge eating disorder (BED), and eating disorder not otherwise specified. Eating disorders affect a variety of populations, but they are largely issues that affect women of Western cultures (Blood, 2005). Although rates for these problems vary from context to context, it is estimated that between 1% and 3% of the popula- tion in Canada and the United States suffer from an eating disorder (Garfinkel et al., 1995; Levine, McVey, Piran, & Ferguson, 2012; Walters & Kendler, 1995). However, many researchers consider eating disorders to be more widespread than these rates suggest, due to the secretive nature of these problems (Maison, 1998) and issues inherent in the diagnostic system (Novotney, 2009; Swanson, Crow, Le Grange, Swendsen, & Merikangas, 2011). These problems exist on a spectrum ranging from socially acceptable behaviours such as diet and exercise to more extreme practices characteristic of what we define as eating disorders (RussellMayhew, 2007). The line between these problems is becoming increasingly blurred as evidenced by the rising number of individuals who live with what are termed subclinical eating disorders and the high preponderance of diagnostic crossover (e.g., from anorexia to bulimia; Eddy et al., 2008; Tozzi et al., 2005).Despite an explosion of research into the nature and treatment of eating disorders, these problems continue to be prevalent, chronic, debilitating, and sometimes life-threatening (Levine et al., 2012), suggesting that there is a gap in our existing knowledge base. Scholars and researchers in the eating disorder field have turned toward exploring the concept of embodiment to address this gap (e.g., Piran & Teall, 2012; Sanz & Burkitt, 2001; Stanghellini, Castellini, Brogna, Faravelli, & Ricca, 2012). Embodiment is a term that has been taken up within a variety of disciplines and refers to the many tacit ways that people go about their day-to-day lives. This includes sensations, visceral experiences, gait, posture, movements, and ones general engagement with the environment. While these modes of being often go unnoticed, they create the very means by which people construct their experiences (Shusterman, 2008). This lived and process-oriented approach has typically fallen to the wayside in favour of a cognitive-behavioural approach that emphasizes control of the body and the separation of human experience into discrete states that can be measured and objectified (Bigwood, 1991; Gremillion, 2002).In this research, I draw from an embodied understanding of eating disorders, which allows for a different grasp of these problems compared to more traditional conceptualizations. It is important to note that, in keeping with this embodied understanding, I use the terms attunement and corporeal Attunement refers to people s prereflective ways of existing in the world. Although embodiment and attunement are similar concepts, the key distinction is that attunement corresponds more closely to a relational process, or the ways that individuals alternately engage with and respond to their social and physical worlds. This can be understood as an ongoing circle existing between bodies and the world in a reciprocal dialogue; thus people are continually adjusting to a terrain or milieu that is always changing (Abram, 1996). This emerging discourse of the body encourages a shift from understanding eating disorders as individual pathologies, as espoused in the traditional medical treatment model. Instead, women who struggle with eating disorders and related problems are seen as people who accordingly express their life and relation to the world in active and communicative ways (Sanz & Burkitt, 2001).Similarly, the term corporeal refers to the bodily and communicative dimension of experience. …" @default.
- W826072303 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W826072303 creator A5028944454 @default.
- W826072303 date "2014-04-01" @default.
- W826072303 modified "2023-09-23" @default.
- W826072303 title "Equine-Facilitated Counselling and Women with Eating Disorders: Articulating Bodily Experience/Le Mieux-êTre Facilité Par le Cheval Dans le Counseling Chez Les Femmes Souffrant De Troubles De L'alimentation: Articuler L'expérience Corporelle" @default.
- W826072303 cites W1197218263 @default.
- W826072303 cites W136877301 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1492283962 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1494886153 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1504057090 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1567573143 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1590859447 @default.
- W826072303 cites W181871021 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1970647968 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1970840871 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1971150621 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1979667720 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1982195602 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1988108022 @default.
- W826072303 cites W1991871955 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2001778283 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2007816997 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2034911394 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2037822457 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2038559085 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2040427265 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2046196410 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2053137415 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2056041346 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2059968128 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2076880399 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2079016248 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2089213710 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2104505823 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2115808815 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2119380286 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2119553561 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2122610866 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2123923433 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2130593434 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2131464998 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2134521319 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2138112477 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2146203034 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2154058461 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2157408646 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2186016024 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2282978320 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2330198776 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2414900583 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2490810792 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2619261592 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2626862194 @default.
- W826072303 cites W2906253013 @default.
- W826072303 cites W3213118050 @default.
- W826072303 cites W38779772 @default.
- W826072303 cites W5686948 @default.
- W826072303 cites W637870038 @default.
- W826072303 hasPublicationYear "2014" @default.
- W826072303 type Work @default.
- W826072303 sameAs 826072303 @default.
- W826072303 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W826072303 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W826072303 hasAuthorship W826072303A5028944454 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C118552586 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C126322002 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C2776035688 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C2776394216 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C2777031586 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C2777556793 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C2778202721 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C2778654693 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C2781426410 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C46312422 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C542102704 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C70410870 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W826072303 hasConcept C95457728 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C118552586 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C126322002 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C15744967 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C166957645 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C2776035688 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C2776394216 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C2777031586 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C2777556793 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C2778202721 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C2778654693 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C2779343474 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C2781426410 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C46312422 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C542102704 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C70410870 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C71924100 @default.
- W826072303 hasConceptScore W826072303C95457728 @default.