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Ated for some time (for example Blumenfeld-Jones, 1995; Lapidus, 1996; Conrad, 2006). However, arts-based research is new to health studies. Of the over 70 arts-based health studies reviewed by Boydell et al (2012), the majority were published in the past 5 years. In nonresearch contexts, the arts have been enlisted for health policy development and health promotion campaigns (Carson et al, 2007). Theatre, with its gestural, sensual and aesthetic language, has become an established tool in health research to convey patients’ lived experiences (Gray et al, 2001, 2003; Mitchell et al, 2006; Rossiter et al, 2008). This article draws from a theatre-based project MS023 dose regarding the psycho-social impacts of lymphedema, a complication from the treatment of breast cancer that involves swelling and associated abnormal accumulation of observable and palpable protein-rich fluid (Armer, 2005; McLaughlin et al, 2008). In the project we used the expressive arts of collages and everyday-objects installations with a group of breast cancer survivors in order to create an ethnodrama ?a dramatic performance of their lived experience ?for subsequent presentation to other survivors and health-care providers. This article focuses on the use of the expressive arts with the group of survivors and enlists Jurgen Habermas’ theory to elucidate their potential to generate undistorted lifeworld communication. As part of Habermas’ extensive work on social political theory, aesthetic rationality is featured as an emancipatory tool; however, this has not been applied to the context of healthcare, a gap filled by this article. A subsequent paper will extend the line of enquiry by analysing the impact of the ethnodrama. Habermas’ conceptual work on the parallel processes of lifeworld colonization and cultural impoverishment, along with his counterweight notion of discursive democracy, offers a foundation for health-care studies (Williams and Popay, 2001; Hodges, 2005; Lohan and Coleman, 2005; Brown, 2011). The one-sided rationalization of communicative practice of everyday life into specialist-utilitarian cultures elucidated292 ?2014 Macmillan Publishers Ltd. 1477-8211 Social Theory Health Vol. 12, 3, 291?Aesthetic rationality of the popular expressive artsby Habermas is clear in Canada’s health-care system. The professionalization of EPZ004777 biological activity medical knowledge and bureaucratization of duties, roles and responsibilities has produced dysfunctional provider practices uncoupled from consensus-oriented procedures of negotiation between patient and providers (Cohen, 1995). The cultural impoverishment of healthcare is attributable to the development of medical expert knowledge uncoupled from the communicative infrastructure of patients’ everyday lives. Silverman (1987) argues that patients’ lifeworlds have become irredeemably colonized and processes of mutual understanding truncated from the cultural resources necessary to moderate system domination. In this article, we take an oppositional position to Silverman and show that the expressive arts are a vehicle to offset expert cultures, revitalize patients’ lifeworlds and expedite discursive democracy within patient groups. We argue that these popular aesthetic forms, which are neither commodifiable nor esoteric, are readily available for subordinating the inner dynamics of the health-care system to new communicatively achieved understandings. After sketching out the relevant Habermasian concepts and outlining the study’s methods and part.Ated for some time (for example Blumenfeld-Jones, 1995; Lapidus, 1996; Conrad, 2006). However, arts-based research is new to health studies. Of the over 70 arts-based health studies reviewed by Boydell et al (2012), the majority were published in the past 5 years. In nonresearch contexts, the arts have been enlisted for health policy development and health promotion campaigns (Carson et al, 2007). Theatre, with its gestural, sensual and aesthetic language, has become an established tool in health research to convey patients’ lived experiences (Gray et al, 2001, 2003; Mitchell et al, 2006; Rossiter et al, 2008). This article draws from a theatre-based project regarding the psycho-social impacts of lymphedema, a complication from the treatment of breast cancer that involves swelling and associated abnormal accumulation of observable and palpable protein-rich fluid (Armer, 2005; McLaughlin et al, 2008). In the project we used the expressive arts of collages and everyday-objects installations with a group of breast cancer survivors in order to create an ethnodrama ?a dramatic performance of their lived experience ?for subsequent presentation to other survivors and health-care providers. This article focuses on the use of the expressive arts with the group of survivors and enlists Jurgen Habermas’ theory to elucidate their potential to generate undistorted lifeworld communication. As part of Habermas’ extensive work on social political theory, aesthetic rationality is featured as an emancipatory tool; however, this has not been applied to the context of healthcare, a gap filled by this article. A subsequent paper will extend the line of enquiry by analysing the impact of the ethnodrama. Habermas’ conceptual work on the parallel processes of lifeworld colonization and cultural impoverishment, along with his counterweight notion of discursive democracy, offers a foundation for health-care studies (Williams and Popay, 2001; Hodges, 2005; Lohan and Coleman, 2005; Brown, 2011). The one-sided rationalization of communicative practice of everyday life into specialist-utilitarian cultures elucidated292 ?2014 Macmillan Publishers Ltd. 1477-8211 Social Theory Health Vol. 12, 3, 291?Aesthetic rationality of the popular expressive artsby Habermas is clear in Canada’s health-care system. The professionalization of medical knowledge and bureaucratization of duties, roles and responsibilities has produced dysfunctional provider practices uncoupled from consensus-oriented procedures of negotiation between patient and providers (Cohen, 1995). The cultural impoverishment of healthcare is attributable to the development of medical expert knowledge uncoupled from the communicative infrastructure of patients’ everyday lives. Silverman (1987) argues that patients’ lifeworlds have become irredeemably colonized and processes of mutual understanding truncated from the cultural resources necessary to moderate system domination. In this article, we take an oppositional position to Silverman and show that the expressive arts are a vehicle to offset expert cultures, revitalize patients’ lifeworlds and expedite discursive democracy within patient groups. We argue that these popular aesthetic forms, which are neither commodifiable nor esoteric, are readily available for subordinating the inner dynamics of the health-care system to new communicatively achieved understandings. After sketching out the relevant Habermasian concepts and outlining the study’s methods and part.

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