Edinburgh Research Archive

Rhythms that matter: the kinetic melodies and matterings of autism and equine therapy practices in the UK and USA.

dc.contributor.advisor
Ecks, Stefan
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Pickersgill, Martyn
en
dc.contributor.author
Malcolm, Roslyn
en
dc.contributor.sponsor
Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
en
dc.date.accessioned
2019-11-29T10:22:24Z
dc.date.available
2019-11-29T10:22:24Z
dc.date.issued
2019-11-25
dc.description.abstract
This thesis is an ethnography of practices of equine therapy used as interventions for autistic people in the UK and USA. It answers the overarching research question: How is autism enacted by models used to understand the efficacy of equine therapy practices? Analysing data from 16 months of fieldwork I show that autism was perceived as a primarily sensoriallymediated condition produced by the person’s embodied inhabitation in the environment. Endocrinological and neuroscientific theories, and personal experiences were incorporated to explain how the therapy worked and relatedly, to understand the condition of autism. I show that vital forces of “energy” and “intent” were believed to score through environmental, sensorial, endocrinological and neurological scales and to transmit sympathetically, and therapeutically, across horse, client and practitioner. These multispecies transmissions were understood to resonate via a property of “flightiness” shared by autistic clients and horses perceived to be the result of sensory sensitivities and an overactive “fight or flight” response. I argue that material metaphors of bodily “integration” and disintegration, “pressure” and its release, and being in and out of “balance” in particular were central to how therapeutic efficacy was perceived to be achieved. These were indeterminate simultaneities of forms of movement and stillness used by my interlocutors to frame equine therapy as a way of calibrating the highly inconstant, dynamic bodily systems perceived to be involved in the autism-equine therapy nexus. I argue that therapeutic efficacy was understood to be orchestrated by bringing various parts and wholes of the lively bodies of clients, horses and practitioners into proportion and harmony, and in coproducing a kinetic melody. Practitioners of the therapy aimed to bring clients into synchrony with the rhythmic movements of the horse, and more broadly, with the rhythms of social time. I propose three therapeutic rhythms to comprehend these models of efficacy, their perceived material effects and the interplays of movement and stillness bound up therein: 1) the calming rhythm of horseback movement, 2) the anchoring rhythm of weekly sessions, and 3) a rhythm produced by the expectation of achieving therapeutic goals in the future. In both senses of the word, these were rhythms that mattered. I argue that AM practices and the biofeedback loops evoked therein acted as lively sites in the morphing of autism; whereby the condition became framed and experienced in new ways. The epistemological uncertainty surrounding the condition, its enduring heterogeneity and kaleidoscopic character allow the condition to act as a mirror on society. The thesis argues that firstly, promoting autism as a sensorially-mediated condition produced in engagements with sensory and social worlds reflects broader societal preoccupations with the interface of mind4 body dualism and holism. Secondly, it argues that the perceived amelioration of autistic symptoms by AM practices reflects popular, scientific and scholarly concerns about what it is, exactly, that differentiates human animals from nonhuman animals. Each section of the thesis details a niche coproduced by humans and horses that I argue was required for this sensorially-mediated kind of autism to emerge as a way to be a person. This thesis contributes to the scholarship of humananimal studies, the anthropology of the body and autism studies.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/36572
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Malcolm, R., Ecks, S. & Pickersgill, M., 2018. ‘It Just Opens Up Their World’: Autism, Empathy, and The Therapeutic Effects of Equine Interactions. Anthropology and Medicine, 25(2): 220- 234.
en
dc.subject
autism
en
dc.subject
efficacy
en
dc.subject
equine therapy
en
dc.subject
animal-assisted therapy
en
dc.subject
kinetic melody
en
dc.subject
relationality
en
dc.subject
therapeutic rhythms
en
dc.subject
therapeutic ecologies
en
dc.title
Rhythms that matter: the kinetic melodies and matterings of autism and equine therapy practices in the UK and USA.
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Name:
Malcolm2019.pdf
Size:
7.58 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:

This item appears in the following Collection(s)