The
American Dance Therapy Association was founded in 1966 as an organization to support the emerging profession of dance/movement therapy and is the only U.S. organization dedicated to the profession of dance/movement therapy. Dance has been used therapeutically for thousands of years. It has been used as a healing ritual in the influence of fertility, birth, sickness, and death since early human history. Over the period from 1840 to 1930, a new philosophy of dance developed in Europe and the United States, defined by the idea that movement could have an effect on the mover vis-a-vis that dance was not simply an expressive art. There is a general opinion that Dance/movement as active imagination was originated by Jung in 1916, developed in the 1960s by dance therapy pioneer
Mary Starks Whitehouse.
Tina Keller-Jenny and other therapists started practicing the therapy in 1940. The actual establishment of dance as a therapy and as a profession occurred in the 1950s, beginning with future American Dance Therapy Association founder Marian Chace.
First wave Marian Chace spearheaded the movement of dance in the medical community as a form of therapy. She is considered the principal founder of what is now dance therapy in the
United States. In 1942, through her work, dance was first introduced to western
medicine. Chace was originally a
dancer,
choreographer, and performer. After opening her own dance school in
Washington, D.C., Chace began to realize the effects
dance and movement had on her students. The reported feelings of wellbeing from her students began to attract the attention of the medical community, and some local doctors began sending patients to her classes. She was soon asked to work at
St. Elizabeth's Hospital in
Washington, D.C. once psychiatrists too realized the benefits their patients were receiving from attending Chace's dance classes. In 1966 Chace became the first president of the
American Dance Therapy Association, an organization which she and several other DMT pioneers founded. During this time, therapists began to experiment with the psychotherapeutic applications of
dance and movement. As a result of the therapists' experiments, DMT was then categorized as a form of
psychotherapy. It was from this second wave that today's Dance Movement Therapy evolved. == See also ==