Abstract | This thesis is about Middendorf breathwork, a way of cultivating breath
and body awareness developed by Ilse Middendorf (b.1910, Berlin),
based on sensing subtle bodily movements that occur with breath as it
is allowed to come and go on its own. Drawing on the author’s personal
experience, together with interviews and formal workshops with peer
participants, the thesis describes the practice of Middendorf
breathwork, traces Middendorf’s forebears and contemporaries,
situating her work in relation to other somatic bodies of work, and
discusses the significance of Middendorf breathwork in relation to
contemporary discourses around breath, embodiment, and experience.
The author proposes that the practice of Middendorf breathwork invites
a different experience of embodiment through an integration of the
kinæsthetic realm with thought, emotion, and intuition through breath.
This practice can connect the individual with the somatic ‘intelligence’
of their body and offer an experience of how this links them in to a
greater whole. Such an experience, it is argued, is a valuable redress
to experiences of bodily abstraction in an increasingly technoscientific
world. |