Burlesque as a Way of Processing Trauma
A multidisciplinary exploration of embodiment, persona, and emotional resilience
Methodological Note (Pilot Study – Practice-Led, Mixed-Methods Design)
This pilot study investigates how an embodied, persona-driven Burlesque practice interacts with experiences of trauma, resilience, and self-perception over a defined six-month period of structured artistic development. The methodology is intentionally hybrid: it honours the epistemic value of artistic practice while integrating light but rigorous psychometric tools to track psychological shifts over time.
1. Methodological Philosophy: Practice as Inquiry
The study follows the principles of practice-led research, where creative process is not the by-product of inquiry but the method itself.
Within this epistemological frame:
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embodied practice generates knowledge;
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persona construction functions as a somatic and narrative tool;
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performance becomes a structured encounter with emotional material;
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the researcher’s artistic experience is not a confound but a central analytic lens.
2. Research Design: Mixed-Methods, Quasi-Experimental Pilot
The pilot adopts a two-phase, pre–post design, balancing feasibility with methodological integrity.
2.1 Duration
Total duration: 24 weeks (6 months)
Rationale: meaningful transformation in embodied processes requires sustained practice; shorter interventions risk superficiality or distortion of the artistic process.
2.2 Structure of the Intervention
Participants engage in a structured Burlesque-based programme including:
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persona development (identity exploration, symbolic meaning-making)
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movement-based embodied practice
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choreographic creation
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rehearsal processes
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three theatre-stage performances (solo/duet/small ensemble)
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regular intimate-space micro-performances
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reflective feedback sessions
3. Quantitative Components (Psychometric Indicators)
A minimal but coherent battery captures psychological and embodied change without burdening participants:
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Trauma-related symptomatology scale (e.g., PTSD-8, PCL-5 short)
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Anxiety & depression measure (e.g., HADS short)
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Embodiment / body awareness scale (e.g., Experience of Embodiment Scale, Body Connection Scale)
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Resilience scale (e.g., Brief Resilience Scale)
Administration Points
Instruments administered at:
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T1 – Pre-intervention
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T2 – Post-intervention
This two-point structure respects the emotional sensitivity of trauma-related work while still allowing measurable change.
Purpose of Measures
These tools are indicative, not diagnostic.
They track:
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shifts in affective distress
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changes in embodied self-perception
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variations in resilience
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movement in trauma-related symptoms
Their role is to illuminate correlations, not to pathologise.
4. Qualitative Components (Narrative & Embodied Data)
Qualitative data is continuous across the 24-week cycle:
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researcher field notes
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participants’ reflective journals (optional)
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semi-structured interviews at T1 and T2
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performance observation (symbolic content, narrative shifts, expressivity)
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persona-development trajectories
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rehearsal-room dynamics
5. Research Team & Roles
Principal Investigator (PI)
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designs artistic & performative processes
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conducts persona and movement work
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observes embodied/narrative shifts
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performs qualitative analysis
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integrates artistic and theoretical interpretation
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maintains ethical oversight within the artistic space
Psychologist (Assistant Collaborator, Methological Consulatnt)
Role:
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advises on scale selection and adaptation
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ensures ethical compliance for psychometric use
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assists with quantitative analysis
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contributes to trauma-sensitive risk assessment
6. Ethical Framework
Given the trauma-related dimension, the study follows a strict ethical protocol:
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informed consent with clear disclosure of emotional risks
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optional participation in reflective components
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confidentiality and secure data storage
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immediate referral pathways for distress escalation
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right to withdraw at any stage
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psychologist availability when needed
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separation of artistic pedagogy from psychological assessment
7. Rationale for Pilot Format
A pilot study is appropriate because:
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the methodology is novel and requires validation
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sample sizes can remain modest (8–12 participants)
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psychometric tools need calibration for this artistic context
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ethical boundaries must be stress-tested
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findings will determine the structure of a later, larger-scale study
8. Expected Contribution
This methodology will allow the study to examine:
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whether embodied, persona-driven practice influences trauma-related symptoms
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how artistic performance, Burlesque in particular, supports resilience
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how performers narrate changes in their relationship to body, memory, and identity
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the potential emergence of a hybrid method: persona as somatic instrument
Authorial Methodological Note
This pilot study emerges from my lived experience as a Burlesque performer, teacher, choreographer, and facilitator of embodied artistic processes. Over the past fifteen years I have observed—and also experienced—how persona-building and aesthetic embodiment provoke shifts in confidence, emotional regulation, relational openness, and the capacity to inhabit one’s body differently. These insights come from practice rather than theory; they do not replace methodology, but they ground and animate it.
This experiential foundation shapes the study’s conceptual frame. The research is not an attempt to “prove” a predetermined hypothesis but a structured inquiry into phenomena repeatedly encountered in real embodied work—how movement, persona, and performance interact with trauma, resilience, and the felt experience of self.
The aim is therefore dual: to uphold academic rigour while honouring the nuance, unpredictability, and emotional complexity that characterise genuine artistic practice.
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