There has for some years now been a debate within the field of music therapy on the issue of music-centered therapy. This book relates to this discussion and presents a contribution. The thesis that is put forward is that a dialogical perspective may serve to frame such therapy. Or, rather, for music as therapy, which is the term that is used here. Some might want to claim that there is no such thing as music as therapy, that the only real therapy there is, is some already established mode of therapy in which music plays a subordinate part, music in therapy. In this book, the attempt is to show a different picture, one which includes also the possibility of music as therapy, that is to say, therapy based on qualities of the medium itself. A particularly much-debated issue has been whether verbal processing is necessary for actual therapy to take place. This book presents and discusses some of the crucial issues involved, and develops a theory to bring out potentials of an experiential, transformative music therapy, in which verbal processing, talking cure style, is not necessarily incorporated. The models related to, and exemplified through vignettes from practice, are mostly improvisational, but the perspective drawn is applied to some extent also to other modalities, such as community-oriented practices and receptive, listening-based music therapy.2006, Paperback, 344 pages.
 
 
 
 
	
		
			| TABLE OF CONTENTS | 
		
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			| PREFACE |  | 
		
			| ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |  | 
		
			| 1. FRAME AND PICTURE  THE TERM MUSIC THERAPY
 Music-centered Therapy
 Analysis and Synthesis
 Music Problems
 THE NEED FOR VERBAL PROCESSING
 Questioning the Need to Verbalize
 Psychodynamically Informed Music Therapy
 Recent Analytical Developments
 DEVELOPMENT OF THEORY
 Early Interaction Analogy
 Not the same as Music
 New Musicology
 Health Musicking
 The Meaning of Words and of Music
 Clinical and Music-based Theories
 Community Music Therapy
 DIFFERENCES OF ASSUMPTIONS
 General Theory
 Recognizing and Accepting Difference
 Indigenous and Imported Theory
 Music-centered thinking
 Insight and Transformative Therapies
 Music as Therapy
 Philosophy, Theory, and Practice
 A Humanistic Foundation
 A Dialogical Perspective
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			| 2. DIALOGUE 
 ORIGIN AND HISTORY OF THE CONCEPTTwo Historical Phases
 MAIN TENETS
 Three Spheres
 Second Versus Third Person
 Immediacy
 Presence and Object
 The Whole Being Involved
 Encounter
 Mutuality
 Responsibility
 Actuality and Latency
 The Eternal You
 COMMENTARY
 Theology and Philosophy
 The Problem of Intersubjectivity
 Applications to Psychotherapy
 On Freuds Psychoanalysis
 The Debate with Jung
 Postmodern Themes
 CRITICISMS
 Explanation and Understanding
 The Constructive Role of It
 A WAY OF VIEWING
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			| 3. THE MUSIC THERAPY TRIAD 
 ENCOUNTER WITH MUSICRelating to, and Talking About
 The Creative Encounter
 The Work Acted Upon, and the Person
 Artistic and Musicological Objectifications
 THE MUSICAL WORK
 Other Ontologies of Music
 Music Embedded in Culture
 Music, Therapist, and Client
 MUSIC AS A MEANS
 The Logic of Means and End
 Playing the Piano for Some Other Purpose
 A Counterexample
 Treating Human Beings as Things
 Humanistic Critique of Reification
 Music as a Physical Object
 THE MUSIC THERAPY TRIANGLE
 An Illustrative Example: Annabel
 Music as a Medium
 A Medium for Therapy
 Interpersonal and Musical Relational Fields
 DIFFERENT SPHERES OF RELATION
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			| 4. RELATIONAL KNOWING 103
 THE EARLY INTERACTION ANALOGYThe Innate You
 Affect Attunement and Connection
 Dynamic Form
 Spoken and Heard
 Change Processes in Therapy
 IMPLICIT RELATIONAL KNOWING
 The Moment of Meeting
 Three Phases of Transition
 Transference Issues Minimized
 A Change that Happens
 Psychodynamic and Humanistic Interdialogue
 APPLICATION TO EXAMPLES FROM THE LITERATURE
 The Example of David
 The Example of Mathew
 Relational Change
 AN EXAMPLE FROM MY OWN PRACTICE: LISA
 A Drum-Playing Incident
 The Relationship Changed
 A Meeting Through Music
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			| 5. RELATING TO MUSIC 
 COMING TO KNOWGetting to Know Music
 Change in the Relation to Music
 CHANGE IN THE SENSE OF SELF
 Peak Experience
 Integrating the Experience
 Incremental Changes
 Musical Transference
 RELATING THE INTERPERSONAL AND THE MUSICAL
 Playing Together
 Communitas
 Two Intercrossing Lines
 SUBSTITUTING WORDS WITH MUSIC
 Dynamic and Aesthetic Form
 Three Sides Interrelated, Across Two Spheres
 Encounter With and Through Music
 Music and Words
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			| 6. ROLES OF MUSIC, WAYS OF TALKING 
 COMPARING MODELS IDEAL-TYPICALLYCreative Music Therapy
 Analytical Music Therapy
 Referential Improvisation
 An Active Approach
 Function versus Overall Change
 Resolving Conflict
 Resistiveness and Participation
 Musical Progression
 Words Facilitating Music
 Music Translated
 Music as a World
 The Musical Relational Field
 PROJECTION AND EXPRESSION
 A Symbolic Projection
 An Aesthetic Expression
 Beyond the Individual
 A Hermeneutics of Suspicion
 An Example of Priestleys
 Reading the Client through Dynamic Form
 VERBALIZATION REQUIREMENT
 On the Possible Integration of the Perspectives
 Shifting Between One and the Other
 Different Roles, Different Plays
 Differences within each Model Too
 WAYS OF TALKING
 A Confused Issue
 Believing in what is said
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			| 7. A FORMED IMAGE OF MUSIC BUBER'S VIEW ON ART A DEFINITION OF MUSIC A PHENOMENOLOGICAL ORIENTATION MUSIC AS ACTIVITY BEYOND AESTHETICS   |   | 
		
			| 8. OUTLINING A RATIONALE
 PHILOSOPHICAL ANTHROPOLOGYReturn to Immediacy
 Turning Toward the Other
 Capacity to Relate
 THE THERAPISTS RESPONSIBILITY
 Artistic and Therapeutic Imagination
 The Notion of Empathy
 A Therapeutic Pursuit
 WORKING AND PLAYING
 The Concept of Play
 No Fixed Correspondence
 Expression by Simple Means
 The Whole Person Engaged
 A Shared Momment
 Gradual Development and Sudden Change
 A Summary of the Therapeutic process
 The example of Ole
 The Two sides of Working and Playing
 ENHANCING RESOURCES
 No Specific Client Group
 Repair and Regeneration
 MUSICAL CHANGE AND PERSONAL CHANGE
 What and How
 Spirit and Grace
 The Way of Playing
 The Notion of Spirit
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			| 9. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE 
 A RESOURCE-ORIENTED APPROACHDifferent Roads, Different Destinations
 Transcending Limitations
 Various Institutional Settings
 Diagnosis and Assessment
 Intervention versus Healing Practice
 Mis-matching as Clinical Intervention
 THERAPEUTIC TECHNIQUE
 Idioms Facilitating Creativity
 Idioms in Therapy
 Relating Music to the Client
 A Conversational Principle
 An Image in the Likeness of
 Aesthetic Properties
 Musical Significance
 Something Itself to Relate to
 EXPRESSIVE RESOURCES
 The Middle Eastern Scale as an example
 The Power of the Response
 THE POTENTIALS OF THE MOMENT
 A Way
 THE ASPECT OF CULTURE
 Music and Identity
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			| 10. COMMUNITY-ORIENTED THERAPY 
 EXPANSIONS OF THE THERAPEUTIC SETTINGCommunal Dialogue
 PERFORMANCE-BASED APPROACH
 The Issue of Confidentiality
 Becoming Known
 The Audience as an Additional Actor
 Therapeutic Potentials of the Social Dimension
 RETAINING A FOCUS ON THE PERSON
 The Case of Josie
 THERAPEUTIC CONTRACT
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			| 11. THE RECEPTIVE MODE 
 TRAVELER, GUIDE, MUSIC, AND IMAGERYTwo Approaches
 Transference onto Music
 RELATING DIRECTLY TO MUSIC
 Using Classical Music
 Listening Competency
 On Knowing some Music
 THERAPEUTIC PROCESS
 The Work and the Play
 Attending to the Traveler
 Sharing in the Experience
 AN EXAMPLE FROM A SESSION OF MY OWN
 Music into the foreground
 Outcome
 AN OPTION OPENED FOR
 Probing or Letting Be
 PROCESSING THE EXPERIENCE
 Not Reducing to Personal Conflict Matters
 Other Modalities than Music in BMGIM
 All Music Experience also Receptive
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			| 12. REMEMBERING AND FORGETTING 
 A THEORY FOR MUSIC AS MUSIC IN THERAPYVerbalization Issue
 An Aesthetics of Music for Music Therapy
 The Therapeutic Relationship
 A General Theory of Music as Therapy
 THE BASIS FOR FURTHER DEVELOPMENT
 Research and Reflexivity
 Creative Development
 An Ethical Basis
 THEORY FOR REMEMBERING
 Forgetting, for Direct Relation
 REFERENCES AUTHOR INDEX TABLES FIGURES |