Where fatherlessness meets music therapy : "the importance of therapist & the uniqueness of music"
Authors
Date
2014A great number of studies are supporting father’s vital contribution in the well-being of their children. Fatherlessness, on the other hand, is something that more and more children are experiencing, growing up in a single-parent family. This, usually, has a number of negative consequences in children’s development (e.g. low self-esteem, loneliness, mistrust, distress,no life model). Music therapy offers an alternative way of dealing with the issue of fatherlessness. With music the therapeutic alliance is taking place faster and in a more pleasant way (making/listening to music). Moreover, trusting and the negative emotions can be first expressed and experienced within musical events -i.e. improvisation. Music therapy it is also seem to be a way that can stop the Cycle of Repeated Behaviors (CoRB), and can set fatherless clients free from their parents choices, equipping them with courage and inspiration to build their own different and better future.
The aim of this thesis is, to briefly sketch father-involvement & absence and its consequences in society and later generations (i.e. children), to provide links between music therapy and the issue of absent father (fatherlessness), and to suggest areas in need for further research on the topic of fatherlessness and music therapy.
Information from the current literature (psychology, sociology, and music therapy) will be
presented and discussed along with information given by professional clinicians; two music
therapists from Finland (Helsinki and Oulu). Links between literature and clinical practice
will be presented as well as directions for further research on music therapy and its
connections to the issue of fatherlessness.
...
Keywords
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
- Pro gradu -tutkielmat [29740]
License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Theoretical Perspectives and Therapeutic Approaches in Music Therapy with Families
Tuomi, Kirsi; Thompson, Grace; Gottfried, Tali; Ala-Ruona, Esa (Universtity of Bergen Library, 2021)Music therapists have described the importance of working collaboratively with family members in various populations throughout the history of the profession. Despite the growing amount of literature, not enough is known ... -
What Happens after Five Years? : The Long-Term Effects of a Four-Session Acceptance and Commitment Therapy Delivered by Student Therapists for Depressive Symptoms
Kohtala, Aino; Muotka, Joona; Lappalainen, Raimo (Elsevier BV, 2017)Brief interventions can be viable treatment options worth consideration in addressing the growing need for treatments of subclinical and clinical depressive symptoms. However, there is uncertainty regarding the long-term ... -
Towards gender awareness in couple therapy and in treatment of intimate partner violence
Päivinen, Helena; Holma, Juha (Policy Press, 2017)Gender is the most pervasive classification of individuals and thus strongly defines couple relationships. Cultural discourses on couple relationships reproduce hierarchical gender differences, and couple distress is often ... -
The sense of self of experienced and non-experienced music therapists in musical improvisation : an interpretative phenomenological analysis
Christodoulou, Artemis (2014)Music therapists’ work is constantly researched and measured in order to find the best possible ways for conducting music therapy and treating people through music. In spite of this, music therapists themselves are rarely ... -
The role of music listening in the music therapy process for people with anxiety disorders : The therapist’s perspective
Taipale, Marianne; Carlson, Emily; Saarikallio, Suvi (Routledge, 2024)Introduction Anxiety is a commonly diagnosed mental health disorder, but it remains underrepresented in music therapy research. Music listening (ML) seems to be an effective tool for anxiety self-management, but there is ...