262679

(2024) Metodo 11 (2).

Movement and meaning

an investigation in early intersubjective development

Tone Roald, Sofie Boldsen, Simo Køppe

pp. 315-354

In this article, we analyze how movement takes part in creating intersubjective meaning. We discuss what Daniel Stern termed ‘affect attunement,’ a primary way of constituting intersubjectivity. Based on an analysis of how movement, meaning-making, vitality affects, and primordial feelings interrelate in affect attunement, we show that primordial feelings and thereby movement play a much greater role in affect attunement than Stern proposed. This makes movement a primary meaning-making modality, indispensable to the development of intersubjectivity. To illustrate the relation between movement and affect attunement in psychological development, we discuss the role of movement in autism. Recent research suggests that differences in movement precede the onset of social-communicative deficits and may be primary to autistic development. Building on the proposed interrelation of movement and primordial feelings in affect attunement, we suggest that autistic movement differences illuminate the vital role played by movement in early intersubjective development.

Publication details

DOI: 10.19079/metodo.11.2.315

Full citation:

Roald, T. , Boldsen, S. , Køppe, S. (2024). Movement and meaning: an investigation in early intersubjective development. Metodo 11 (2), pp. 315-354.

This text is available for download in the following format(s)