 |
Long overdue, this book is the first to explore feminist
perspectives in music therapy. The introduction provides
an overview of feminism in terms of the history and major
approaches of feminism and an overview of feminism and
music therapy. The chapters in Part One have sociological
threads that tie them together: the first applies ideas
of sociology to the field of music therapy and proposes
four principles for a feminist music therapy; the second
explores the potential of community music therapy, practiced
within a feminist worldview, to free itself from the
oppressive potential of therapy, society, and the self,
by working with people within the context of their gendered
social, cultural, and political environments; the third
describes ways in which an ecological worldview can inform
all of our actions as ethical human beings; the fourth
describes how the ancient Goddess tradition can inform
practices of music psychotherapy in general and BMGIM
in particular; the fifth describes the centrality of
the concept of Han in the lives of Korean women because
of their oppressive life circumstances and explores the
suitability of music as a form of expression in therapy
for Korean women; and the sixth explores the possibilities
of feminist music therapy in Taiwan by examining the
role of music in healing in the indigenous, Chinese,
and western cultural traditions that make up Taiwanese
culture as a whole. The chapters in Part Two examine
clinical work from a feminist perspective. The clinical
work explored includes music therapy with a West Indian
woman who was recovering from a cerebrovascular accident;
teenage girls who have been physically and sexually abused;
women who have been emotionally, physically, and/or sexually
abused; Israeli women who have suffered trauma in their
lives; and women suffering from chronic pain. The chapters
in Part Three critically reflect on significant aspects
of music therapy: music therapy discourse in terms of
the use of “mother” concepts in music therapy literature
and how these contribute to the conservation of traditional
expectations of gender roles; song selection and the
ways in which both the overt and covert messages in songs
can contribute to the ways clients view themselves and/or
their attitudes about and behaviors toward women; the
branding of separate approaches to music therapy as a
result of the competitiveness that grew out of the rise
of capitalism; and, issues of representation of women
in music, in healthcare, and in music therapy. Finally,
the chapters in Part Four focus on specific areas of
training in music therapy from a feminist perspective
including pedagogy, supervision, assessment, research,
and ethics. 2006 (ISBN 978-891278-38X, 500 pages, $54).
Reviews
By: |
- Mercédès
Pavlicevic, Nordic Journal of Music Therapy,
Online Book Reviews, January
31, 2007.
- Barbara Daveson in the Australian Journal of
Music Therapy, Volume 18, 2007
- J.J. Nicol in the Canadian Journal of Music
Therapy, 2007
|
|
|
|
|
|