This article investigates Franziska Boas's pioneering work as part of the arts program at Bellevue Hospital in New York. During late 1930s and early 1940s, a few modern dancers explored dance as a holistic practice. They believed that movement not only was a way to express emotional states, but that modifications in movement could initiate emotional healing. The profession of dance therapy, a subfield of arts therapy, resulted. Boas was one of the first dance practitioners to work in a hospital setting. She volunteered her services at Bellevue Hospital in New York from 1939 until 1943 as part of an arts program originally funded by the Works Progress Administration (WPA). At Bellevue, Boas worked closely with the internationally renowned child psychiatrist, Dr. Lauretta Bender, with whom Boas wrote some of the earliest scholarly treatises on the burgeoning field of dance therapy. Resistance to this early incarnation of dance therapy by many in the medical profession and the media illuminates 1930s and 1940s ideas about mental health, therapeutic interventions and child advocacy. © Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. 2006.
CITATION STYLE
Lindgren, A. (2006). The pioneering work of Franziska Boas at Bellevue Hospital in New York, 1939-1943. American Journal of Dance Therapy, 28(2), 59–86. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10465-006-9017-0
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