“You can say something in music”: a single-case study of music therapy with a person living with chronic aphasia
| dc.date.accessioned | 2020-03-24T13:41:29Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2020-03-24T13:41:29Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2019 | |
| dc.description.abstract | Studies to date on music therapy and music-based therapeutic interventions for people living with aphasia have mainly focused on functional language outcomes, and have been quantitative in nature. Whilst early music-based interventions have used a manualised method focusing on improving functional language output, subsequent variations with more of a music therapy orientation have introduced improvisational elements. However, the study of these improvised elements and the role they may play within a therapeutic relationship has been largely overlooked. The purpose of this single-case study is to explore what it might have meant for a person living with aphasia to “say something in music”. The author takes the position that for a person to feel that something has been said, they must also perceive it to have been comprehended and responded to by an ‘other’. Hence a relation-centred method of inquiry was adopted to study the ways in which a therapeutic alliance was formed and reformed in the moving-along process of music therapy, within both music and words, intra-subjectively and inter-subjectively. The author concludes that a psychodynamically informed, improvisational approach to music therapy with a person living with aphasia is congruent with a value-based person-centred approach to forming a socially constructed therapeutic relationship. The use of a relation-centred method of inquiry may also offer an ethical approach to researching the lived experience of people with aphasia within music therapy encounters. Key words: Aphasia, music therapy, improvisation, psychodynamic, relation-centred | en |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://eresearch.qmu.ac.uk/handle/20.500.12289/10554 | |
| dc.title | “You can say something in music”: a single-case study of music therapy with a person living with chronic aphasia | en |
| dc.type | Thesis |