Illuminating bodily presence in midwifery practice

The article highlights the introduction of new coloured illumination technology in healthcare environments. Through sensory ethnographic fieldwork, the article showcases the cohesion and clashes between human bodies, hospital spaces and new sensory technologies, exemplified by a case of delivery roo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inEmotion, space and society Vol. 37; p. 100720
Main Authors Nielsen, Stine Louring, Bille, Mikkel, Barfoed, Anne Berlin
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.11.2020
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Summary:The article highlights the introduction of new coloured illumination technology in healthcare environments. Through sensory ethnographic fieldwork, the article showcases the cohesion and clashes between human bodies, hospital spaces and new sensory technologies, exemplified by a case of delivery rooms in Denmark. By addressing how midwives experience and practice lighting during the process of labour, we show how lighting technologies act as atmospheric elements and affect notions of intimacy and ‘being present’ in midwifery practice. The analysis points out a nuanced midwifery sensory awareness of how light not only shapes atmospheres in the delivery room, but also how these atmospheres attune the practices and gestures of human bodies. Through Hermann Schmitz's notion of ‘bodily gripping powers’, we thereby argue for a general attentiveness in healthcare design to how technologies and design affect bodily practices and employees' understanding of their profession. While health science has long showed the effects of lighting on the human body, now increasingly employed in healthcare design practices, the article argues for a broader attention to the interstices of technology and practices of professionals and patients in organizing how spaces are felt and bodies attuned. •Multi-coloured lighting technologies are implemented with various effects in healthcare environments.•Need for attention on overlaps and gaps between technology potentials and professional’s bodily experiences and practices.•Midwives experience and practice lighting during the process of labour to shape intimacy and bodily gestures.•Beyond visibility, lighting is applied as atmospheric element in delivery rooms to feel in particular ways.
ISSN:1755-4586
1878-0040
DOI:10.1016/j.emospa.2020.100720