"我想她已经原谅我了利用游戏语言培养无语言能力儿童与母亲之间的联系

Julia Whitaker, Chika Matsudaira
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引用次数: 0

摘要

交流、理解和分享意义的能力是人类发展的一个显著特点,对于融入社会群体并为其所接受以及形成自我意识至关重要。人类婴儿从一出生就开始通过游戏互动进行交流,游戏一直是整个童年期的主要交流方式,所有年龄段和能力的人都可以参与。游戏是主体间性发展不可或缺的一部分,而主体间性是所有人类联系的基础,对社会接纳和情感健康至关重要。本文描述了当儿童被诊断出患有严重疾病或残疾时,游戏如何作为一种元交流模式,成为围绕医疗保健经历分享意义的一种手段。一个来自日本的案例说明了健康游戏专家如何使用游戏语言来培养被诊断为神经损伤的亲子关系中的联系,从而加强了对游戏作为童年通用语言的作用的广泛认可。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“I Think She’s Forgiven Me”: Utilizing the Language of Play to Nurture Connection between a Nonverbal Child and Their Mother
The ability to communicate, to understand and share meaning, is a salient feature of human development, crucial for integration in, and acceptance by, the social group and for the emergence of a sense of selfhood. Human infants are primed to communicate through playful interaction from the moment of birth and play remains the primary mode of communication throughout childhood, accessible by all ages and abilities. Play is integral to the development of intersubjectivity on which all human connection depends, and which is vital to social acceptance and emotional wellbeing. This paper describes the way in which play represents a mode of metacommunication when a child is diagnosed with a serious illness or disability as a means of sharing meaning around healthcare experiences. A case example from the Japanese context illustrates the way in which the Health Play Specialist uses the language of play to nurture connection in a parent-child dyad living with a diagnosis of neurological impairment, reinforcing the need for wider recognition of the role of play as the universal language of childhood.
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