Duration of engagement
Duration of engagement qualifies participation, validates contributions and therefore deeply influences human lives. One can be as authentic on Facebook as on a piece of land for 80 years. Where authenticity used to be a property of being in one place for long stretches of time, in today’s world this notion is replaced by being engaged in an activity for specific durations of time. Duration of engagement is needed for authentic human participation to emerge. Longer durations of engagement need to include ‘empty time’ for human experience to surface. In empty time, whether one is bored or not, feelings, emotions and a different thinking surface and human presence emerges. To generate empty time, robust structures of time design are needed. Only in moments of empty time people can experience the situation they are in and act to be well. When duration of engagement is not properly designed, including a start and end with empty time within as well, human beings loose well-being in significant ways.
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The recognition of difference
There is one field, however, in which the contribution of the two projects—the actual witnessing…
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Recognition beyond recognition
Globalisation transformed Western conceptions of witnessing and bearing witness to gross violations…
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From oppression to repression: creating hybrid witnessing
Could ‘silence’, as mentioned in the two projects, be rather a reference to the concept of ‘culture…
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The projects
It is with such view in mind that my paper considers the projects ‘We want (u) to know’ and…
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Under the ‘eyes of the pineapple’ and after
When the Vietnamese army entered Cambodia in January 1979, the soldiers found a devastated country…
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Old and new testimonies
It is the first time that I appear before a tribunal. I am overwhelmed in turn by painful souvenirs…
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Witnessing is not a static phenomenon
Witnessing is a shifting category determined by what kind of events are witnessed. This is what the…
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Concept of presence
Following the literature, these characteristics (as names or data concerning a certain type of…
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Our ‘sensing’ of the other
In her work on witnessed presence, Nevejan (2009) argues that that our awareness and connectivity…
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The internal pulse
From the domain of music and neuroscience, Grahn (2009) provides a comprehensive review of the…
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Voice and synchrony
There is growing research on understanding how our bodies move with voice and how voices move with…
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Well-being: intra- and interpersonal synchrony
William Condon proposed that being able to entrain in time with another person facilitates physical…
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Rhythm and music
In contrast to research in anthropology and human interaction, where entrainment, rhythm, and…
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Rhythm and culture
George Leonard (1981) writes about identity as being ‘the stable, persistent, unique quality that…
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Timing and meaning
In music, timing is very important. If you get the rhythm right, the tune will be recognizable as…
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Rhythm in language and music
The rhythmic coupling in Body Moves seems to be akin to music performance. In a choir, for example