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Caring for Music: Musical Life, Late Life: Music and Change: Ecological Perspectives

Autor Gary Ansdell, Tia DeNora
en Limba Engleză Paperback – iul 2026
Caring for Music presents a groundbreaking ethnographic study of musical engagement in residential care, revealing how music becomes a medium of connection, pleasure, and relationship rather than merely an intervention for symptom management. Through detailed case studies from an eight-year immersion in ‘Hill House’, this longitudinal research documents the rich musical practices that emerge when people care for music together.Readers gain access to innovative micro-methods for documenting music-in-action, revealing often-unnoticed capabilities and contributions from residents, staff, and visitors alike. The book delivers a compendium of practical examples showing how distributed creativity operates in care settings, offering practitioners and family caregivers models for collaborative musical activity that enhance connection and quality of life. Rather than presenting music as a ‘magical’ solution to ‘tragic’ conditions, it demonstrates how caring for music creates meaningful, beautiful, and festive moments even in challenging circumstances.This resource is essential for music therapists, community musicians, healthcare professionals, and family caregivers seeking person-centred approaches to late-life care. It will also appeal to researchers in music sociology, medical humanities, and gerontology.The book is supported by the Care for Music project website, featuring additional resources and ongoing updates from the authors.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781041166573
ISBN-10: 1041166575
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: 40
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Music and Change: Ecological Perspectives

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Postgraduate, Professional Reference, and Undergraduate Core

Cuprins

Introduction
Part One – Setting the Scene
Part Two – Following People & Music
CAPABILITY
MOVING
PERSONHOOD
REACHING
HOME
LATE LIFE
Further Reading
Section Summaries

Notă biografică

Gary Ansdell is an experienced music therapist, trainer, researcher and author. He is currently an Associate of Nordoff & Robbins UK and Honorary Professor at Exeter University. His research centres on the tradition of Nordoff-Robbins music therapy and Community Music Therapy. He lives in Norwich UK, where he works in a care home as a music therapist and is also a deputy singer in Norwich cathedral choir. Gary is author/co-author of seven books on music therapy/music and health and joint editor (with Tia DeNora) of the Routledge book series Music and Change.
 
Tia DeNora is Professor of Sociology at the University of Exeter. Her research is in music sociology, music and wellbeing, science and technology studies, social theory and research methods. She collaborated with Gary Ansdell, Wolfgang Schmid and Fraser Simpson on the Care for Music Project. She has published widely on music and mental health, cultural theory, historical musicology, hope, health technology and research methods. She is a Fellow of the British Academy.

Recenzii

‘The authors’ reflections evoke the experience and specific power of musicking in the care home setting, not least through the exquisite use of language. I believe the book will be invaluable to music therapy students and practitioners (even those with considerable experience) because of the way it delves into what makes music therapy in the context of what makes social care. I would love the book to be read not only by those involved with music therapy but by others working in the ‘caring’ professions, including my own field of speech and language therapy. And I say this as someone steeped in psycholinguistic/cognitive neuropsychological approaches to language difficulties and valuing the contribution these approaches make to our understanding of the ‘inside’ experience of people we work with. Throughout the years of my mother needing care I was always protesting against the assumption that ‘caring’ is something some people (predominantly women) do naturally, when like any field of expertise it requires sophisticated interest, understanding, knowledge and skills, though of a sort that doesn’t fit dominant views of what these entail. The authors illustrate clearly the specific contribution of music, as a form that is part of (almost) everyone’s life and somehow survives the ravages of dementia, but importantly, the specific contribution of the music therapist and how music therapy contributes to creating a family and home (which is certainly what I experienced on the occasions when I was there for a session) and I think the book conveys all this beautifully.’
Dr Shula Chiat, daughter of one of the residents
'This book is unquestionably a must-read for students and music therapists as well as for those working in elder care. It compellingly demonstrates the value of a music-centred approach that remains sensitive to the contextual factors shaping this work. Rooted in creative theory and guided by practical wisdom, it presents a deeply humanistic vision of music therapy.
Beyond its immediate relevance for practitioners, the book also serves as an inspiring introduction to the field itself, offering exemplary detailed insights into how we might engage with music and people in meaningful ways. It will be of great interest to anyone involved in elder care—including family members and policymakers—providing profound knowledge about how to enhance quality of life in the final phase of living.'
Even Ruud, Professor Emeritus, Norwegian Academy of Music and University of Oslo
‘Meticulously and beautifully written, Ansdell and DeNora capture a genuine essence of all that can happen when music is thoughtfully integrated into aging care contexts–not as a means of “fixing” problems but as a relational aesthetic medium that offers myriad possibilities for living well in spite of difficulties often experienced in later life.’
Laurel Young, Ph.D., MTA, Professor of Music Therapy, Concordia University (Montréal, Canada)

Descriere

Caring for Music presents a groundbreaking ethnographic study of musical engagement in residential care, revealing how music becomes a medium of connection, pleasure, and relationship rather than merely an intervention for symptom management.