You are hereHome › Department & College Collections › Performance and Spirituality: 2010-2015 (Archive) › Entering the Heart of Experience Style American Medical Association (JAMA)APAChicago 16 - author-dateChicago 17IEEEModern Language Association (MLA)National Library of Medicine Choose the citation style. Search for this publication on Google Scholar Middleton, D., & Chamberlain, F. (2012). Entering the Heart of Experience: First Person Accounts in Performance & Spirituality. Performance and Spirituality, 3(1). Entering the Heart of Experience Details Type journal article Title Entering the Heart of Experience: First Person Accounts in Performance & Spirituality Contributor(s) Middleton, Deborah (author)Chamberlain, Franc (author)(editor)(translator) Located In Performance and Spirituality ISSN 2157-4049 Volume 3 Issue 1 Date 2012 Use/Reproduction In Copyright Abstract "In this paper, Middleton and Chamberlain introduce the inaugural publication of ""Perspectives on Practice,"" which will be a new and ongoing section in ""Performance and Spirituality"" that will publish academically rigorous, first-person accounts of intersections between performance and spirituality. In this article, the authors take up arguments for the development of a rigorous first-person methodology for consciousness research and apply them to the study of performance and spirituality. They outline the implications of adopting and including the first person perspective in performance research, and then explore its applicability to the particular case of the enquiry into relationships between performance and spirituality. They argue that the promotion of rigorous and contextualised first-person accounts can provide this field of study with significant data; high-quality descriptions of what Varela and Shear called ""The View from Within."" Such descriptions could provide detailed insights into, for example, the nature of the performative phenomena which yield spiritual experience. Further, we shall explore the extent to which the adoption of the first-person mode of enquiry can increase, as well as illuminate, the experience in question."