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Humans
cannot escape culture. Culture provides the tools humans
need to deal with the challenges of everyday life and
with the symbolic artifacts they depend upon to communicate
and construct their life histories. Culture thus permeates
the personalities of therapists and clients, a fact that
hardly has been given the attention it deserves in music
therapy theory. Culture-Centered Music Therapy explores
the implications of taking culture-inclusive perspectives
for practice, theory, and research. Part One outlines
premises for the argument, examining basic concepts such
as culture, humankind, meaning, "musicking," and
the nature-nurture debate. Part Two highlights how culture-centered
music therapy may be practiced. The scope varies from
community music therapy (aimed in part on cultural change
in the community), to ecological music therapy (focusing
on communication at micro- and mesosystem levels), to
individual music psychotherapy (considering the individual
in cultural context). In Part Three, implications for
describing and understanding music therapy are discussed,
including a chapter on how to define music therapy as
practice, discipline, and profession. A culture-inclusive
model of the music therapy process is also proposed.
Part Four suggests approaches to music therapy research
within a culture-centered context. A call for increased
reflexivity, the ability to reflect upon one's social
and cultural position, is at the heart of the discussion,
along with a continuing theme of this book: the relations
and tensions between local and more general perspectives
on music therapy. (2002, ISBN 1-891278-14-2;$28).
Brynjulf
Stige is the first Coordinator of the music therapy education
program at Sogn og Fjordane University in Sandane, Norway,
where he is an associate professor. With diverse experiences
as a music therapist using a community based approach,
Stige has written numerous articles and books on music
therapy and music education. He is editor-in-chief of
the Nordic Journal of Music Therapy, and co-editor (with
Carolyn Kenny) of Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy.
Reviews
By: |
- Leslie
Bunt in the Nordic Journal of Music Therapy:
Book Reviews Online (March, 2003).
- Mercedes
Pavlicevic in the British Journal of Music Therapy,15
(2).
- Kenneth
Aigen in Music Therapy Perspectives, 2003, 21
(1), 53-54.
- Tony
Wigram in Psychology of Music 31 (3), 357-359,
July 2003.
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