Abstract

Individuals’ capacities to contribute to more sustainable living are deeply influenced by their early life experiences. Hence, there is a need to discover which experiences are relevant to young children’s contemporary and future contributions to more sustainable living. Perceiving children as aesthetically oriented to the world and their sense of belonging as a core experience for social and cultural sustainability, and using the example of dancing, we investigate how such a sense of belonging can be supported through aesthetic first-person experiences. This article is therefore structured around the following research question: How can adults’ experiences of themselves, others and their sense of belonging—when dancing—inform explorations of ways to foster embodied and aesthetic belonging for social and cultural sustainability in early childhood education (ECE)? Drawing on a phenomenological study, we analyse interviews with four dancers, who differ in age, gender and dance genre. Our analysis reveals their experiences when dancing as being in a meditative state, having a sense of freedom and feeling body and mind as one, described as an overall “different”, resilient way of being and belonging in a social context. Our findings indicate that facilitating moments of sensible and bodily awareness can support a non-verbal understanding of oneself and others, as well as arguments for promoting aesthetic experiences while dancing as relevant to sustainable practices in ECE.

Highlights

  • Accepted: 17 July 2021Individuals’ capacities to contribute to more sustainable living are deeply influenced by their early life experiences

  • We aim to gain insight into aesthetic bodily ways to belong in early childhood education (ECE), a way of belonging that is of core value for young children who still first and foremost experience themselves, others and places to belong through their moving bodies [14]

  • Since we aimed to find out what would happen in the moments of flow/presence in the dance, we focused on the moment when the dance occurred [18]

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Summary

Introduction

Accepted: 17 July 2021Individuals’ capacities to contribute to more sustainable living are deeply influenced by their early life experiences. A central context for early experiences is early childhood education (ECE), and strong voices argue for the importance of education for sustainability, even for young children [1,2,3]. Despite these strong voices, there is still a need to discuss what experiences are relevant to young children’s contemporary and future contributions to more sustainable living [4]. We aim to participate in this discussion by investigating how dance can form relevant experiences for young children’s contemporary and future contribution to more sustainable living. McKenzie [9] views such sustainability as “a life-promoting state within communities, and a process within communities that can achieve this condition” [9]

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