Power of Music
«
Kennedy guides us on a fascinating journey through child development, neuroscience, musicology and psychoanalysis. […] This book will be of particular interest to practitioners with a love of music and a curiosity about its power to touch our deepest feelings yet elude explanation.
» Omar Sattaur MBACP (Accred) – Therapy Today, April 2021
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Detaljer
- Forlag
- Phoenix Publishing House
- Innbinding
- Paperback
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9781912691739
- Utgivelsesår
- 2020
- Format
- 23 x 15 cm
Anmeldelser
«
Kennedy guides us on a fascinating journey through child development, neuroscience, musicology and psychoanalysis. […] This book will be of particular interest to practitioners with a love of music and a curiosity about its power to touch our deepest feelings yet elude explanation.
» Omar Sattaur MBACP (Accred) – Therapy Today, April 2021
«
‘Kennedy takes us on a thought-provoking and absorbing journey down many and varied avenues in his mission to understand the enigma of music […] The reader is provided with a rich variety of ideas, thoughts and speculations derived from many fields and examined with scholarship and enthusiasm.’
» Anthea Gomez, 'The International Journal of Psychoanalysis', 102:3, 2021
«
‘… a unique and thought-provoking read. Kennedy’s multidisciplinary approach ensures every reader will learn something new, no matter what their area of expertise.’
» Rosie Olver, thecuspmagazine.com
«
The power that music exerts on human beings has been recognised since ancient times, but how and why it does so remains something of a mystery. As a psychoanalyst and music-lover, Roger Kennedy is well placed to undertake an examination of the effects of music on the mind and the relation of music to the unconscious. This book offers an accessible and engaged exploration of this fascinating area of investigation.
» Armand D’Angour, Fellow and Tutor in Classics, Jesus College, Oxford
«
The author invites readers to re-evaluate their current beliefs about music in therapy, as he presents a compelling argument that musicality acts as the basis of all human communication’ […] Accessible to therapists from all modalities […] The power of music is a well-considered and thoroughly researched study of a topic that might sit outside the everyday awareness of most therapists. The book gave me the opportunity to reflect on my practice from a totally new angle. I now notice the timbre and pitch of my patients’ voices, revealing a new pathway to the unconscious.
» Aiden Duffy, applied psychologist and BACP registered therapist – BACP Healthcare Counselling and Ps
«
'Overall, it is a very readable book that is interesting and enriching for not only music lovers and psychoanalysts. He takes the reader on a journey to explore the nature of the musical experience from a psychoanalytic perspective, which is informative and rewarding. Although there is already some recent literature on the subject, Kennedy's work is characterized by its comprehensive and compact way of juxtaposing and relating the results of empirical studies, history, and psychoanalytic knowledge. The diversity of the literature, which he places in interesting contexts, is impressive. In this way, he makes an important contribution to understanding the phenomenon of the power of music.'
» Ingrid Erhardt, clinical psychologist, psychotherapist, music therapist, and psychoanalyst, Internat
«
The book betrays the enormously wide reading, interests, and sympathies of its author, by his multiple points of reference. Roger Kennedy discusses in-depth ideas from composers, psychoanalysts, performers, philosophers, literary authors, and musicologists. Seeing music in the round may be the most important feature of this deeply original book. His literary style combines scholarship and clarity. As you would expect from a psychoanalyst, he is particularly interested in relationships: the relationships within composers’ minds that have brought compositions into being, relationships between performers, critics and music lovers, relationships within pieces, between the notes themselves. I highly recommend this book.
» Francis Grier, composer and psychoanalyst
«
Roger Kennedy’s The Power of Music: Psychoanalytic Explorations is a masterful multidisciplinary account of the relationship between music and emotion. Drawing on infant research, neuroscience, and evolutionary theory as well as musicology and psychoanalysis, Kennedy leads his reader on a musical journey to the origins of musicality in infantile and social experience and its lifelong development in unconscious receptivity.
» Neil Vickers, Professor of English Literature and the Health Humanities, King’s College London
«
I found it fascinating throughout, and drew comfort from an underpinning narrative that seems to centre on the importance of listening. An inability to listen, rather than to simply hear, causes so many problems, but music forces us to listen, and makes us better at it. I also loved the notion of ‘musicking’, bringing all involved in music together, whether writing, listening, or playing.
» Mark Wigglesworth, internationally renowned Olivier Award-winning conductor