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Music, Music Therapy and Trauma: International Perspectives

Autor Marieke P. Molenaar-Klumper Diane Snow Austin Editat de Julie Sutton
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 mar 2002
A study of the effects of psychological trauma and how music therapy can be used with those who have suffered it. It covers: the neurology of trauma and music; social and cultural perspectives on trauma; and music and trauma in areas where there is war, community unrest and violence.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781843100270
ISBN-10: 1843100274
Pagini: 272
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 16 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: JESSICA KINGSLEY PUBLISHERS

Notă biografică

Julie Sutton has practised as a registered music therapist for over eighteen years, working with a wide range of clients and also as a researcher and registered clinical supervisor. Her research interests include Parkinson's disease, complex speech and language impairment, Rett Syndrome, psychological trauma and interpersonal processes in improvisation. She has a private practice, working regularly in Belfast, Dublin, London and for the Pavarotti Music Therapy Centre in Bosnia-Herzegovina. She has published and presented internationally. A member of several professional groups and the UK representative for the European Music Therapy Confederation, Julie has just completed her doctorate.

Cuprins

Introduction, Julie Sutton, Belfast and Dublin; Clinical Advisor, Pavarotti Music Centre, Mostar, Bosnia. Part One, Trauma Perspectives. 1. Trauma: Trauma in context, Julie Sutton. 2. Neurology: The brain - its music and its emotion. The neurology of trauma, Dr Michael Swallow, OBE, FRCP. Part Two, Culture, Society and Musical Perspectives. 3. Culture and Society: The role of creativity in healing and recovering one's power after victimisation, Dr Marie Smyth, University of Ulster, and the Initiative on Conflict Resolution and Ethnicity. 4. Music: The politics of silence: the Northern Ireland composer and the Troubles, Hilary Bracefield, University of Ulster. Part Three, International Clinical Perspectives. 5. South Africa: Fragile rhythms and violent listenings: Music therapy with South African children, Dr Mercedes Pavlicevic, University of Pretoria. 6. UK: Music and human rights, Matthew Dixon, Medical Foundation for the Care of Victims of Torture. 7. Ireland: See me, hear me, play with me: Working with the trauma of early abandonment and deprivation in psychodynamic music therapy, Ruth Walsh Stewart, Our Lady's Children's Hospital, Dublin, and David Stewart. 8. Bosnia: A music therapy service in a post-war environment, Louis Lang and Una McInerney, Pavarotti Music Centre, Mostar. 9. UK: 'In the Music Prison': The story of Pablo, Helen Tyler, Nordoff-Robbins Music Therapy Centre, London. 10. Israel: Trauma and its relation to sound and music, Adva Frank-Schwebel, Bar Ilan University and David Yellin College, Jerusalem. Part Four, the Support Perspective. 11. Processes in listening together: An experience of distance supervision of work with traumatised children, Louise Lang, Una McInerney, Rosemary Monaghan and Julie Sutton, Bosnia and the UK. 12. The voice of trauma: A wounded healer's perspective, Diane Austin, New York University.Afterword, Julie Sutton. References. Index.