Dialogue in Music Therapy - Its Role and Forms

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

633 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Dialogue is a fundamental human way of acquiring knowledge. Psychological descriptions of dialogue range from pre-natal ones to adult turn-taking. Scales have been devised to rate its well-functioning, and conversational analysis has been introduced to illuminate the interactive aspect within music.

Case vignettes illustrate different kinds of dialogue with my own clients suffering from intellectual disabilities. With Lone, a focused training of turn-taking became possible, despite pronounced autistic behaviour. With Dennis I employed both turn-taking training and playing of arranged songs. The latter had the purpose of providing a relatively safe situation where initiative had to be shown. Asymmetric dialogue deals with the challenge presented by clients with contact disabilities. Ideas are stated on how to cope with scarcity of response. A hierarchical model of time-levels is presented in which levels are related to activities of the session, aiming at providing sustained structure as well as flexibility ccording to situations arising. The conclusion compares forms of dialogue described in the vignettes: "regular turn-taking", "communication at a "split-second level"" and "asymmetric dialogue". As a possible field of further research, studies of conscious/subconscious interaction in the human psyche as well as how different dialogue levels function together are suggested
Original languageEnglish
JournalVoices. A World Forum of Music Therapy
Volume15
Issue number2
ISSN1504-1611
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2015

Bibliographical note

The full text pdf versions given here are copies of the online version originally in HTML

Keywords

  • communicative musicality
  • dialogue forms
  • time levels
  • metaphor
  • metaphorical description
  • tertiary process
  • intellectual disabilities

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Dialogue in Music Therapy - Its Role and Forms'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this