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Joan Chodorow
![Chodorow speaking at the [[International Association for Analytical Psychology|International Association for Analytical Psychology Congress]] at the [[Kyoto International Conference Center]] in 2016](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/8a/Joan_Chodorow_Kyoto_International_Conference_Center_8.28.16.jpg)
In her early career, she studied and collaborated with dance and movement therapists Trudi Schoop, a world-renowned dancer and mime, and Mary Starks Whitehouse, the founding pioneer of Authentic Movement. Authentic Movement is a completely self-directed form of dance/movement therapy rooted in C.G. Jung's depth psychology. In this embodied practice, individuals discover a bridge between the conscious and the unconscious through natural movement in the presence of a compassionate witness.
Chodorow also studied with Irmgard Bartenieff, a dancer, choreographer, and theorist who developed new possibilities in movement training, and Alma Hawkins, a pioneer in dance education who founded the United States' first dance department at the University of California, Los Angeles. These early collaborations informed Chodorow's clinical practice, and led to her ongoing research, teaching, and writing on the body-psyche relationship, especially the emotions and their multi-sensory expression and transformation.
As a leading pioneer of Active Imagination in movement (also known as Authentic Movement or Movement in Depth), she published widely. Her books include ''Dance'' ''therapy and depth psychology: the moving imagination'' and ''Jung on Active Imagination''. A selection of her articles appear in ''Authentic movement: essays by Mary Starks Whitehouse, Janet Adler and Joan Chodorow'' edited by Patrizia Pallaro. Her work has been translated into 20 languages, including Bulgarian, Czech, Danish, Dutch, French, German, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Mandarin, Polish, Russian, and Spanish.
She was the co-developer of the Archetypal Affect System, with her late husband, Jungian psychoanalyst Dr. Louis H. Stewart, and his brother, child psychiatrist Dr. Charles T. Stewart.
In 1999, Chodorow was selected to present the Marian Chace Foundation Lecture for the American Dance Therapy Association (ADTA). In 2009, she received the American Dance Therapy Association Lifetime Achievement Award. Provided by Wikipedia
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