|
Showing 1 - 17 of
17 matches in All Departments
|
Embracing Solitude (Hardcover)
Bernadette Flanagan; Foreword by June Boyce-Tillman; Beverly Lanzetta
|
R914
R751
Discovery Miles 7 510
Save R163 (18%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This book interrogates the notion of belonging through musicing
rituals in the South African context. The authors raise questions
such as "What can we learn from musicing rituals?", "What does it
mean to belong through musicing?" and "In what ways could musicing
address marginalization and transform a broken society?" To answer
these questions, the editors employ a range of perspectives from
micro-sociological theory to personal accounts of marginalization
and belonging through musicing. The contributors employ both
established and novel qualitative strategies of inquiry including
case studies, narrative inquiry, performative autoethnography,
practice as research, and interpretive phenomenological analysis,
amongst others. Although this book focuses on musicing in the South
African context, international readers will also benefit from the
rich theoretical and methodological contributions in this volume.
It investigates the potentiality of cultivating a sense of
belonging through musicing rituals to heal a mutilated world. The
contributions will inform and enhance readers' repertoire of
musicing strategies in both community and educational contexts.
This work is based on the research supported in part by the
National Research Foundation of South Africa (Grant Numbers:
118579). The Grantholder, Prof Liesl van der Merwe, acknowledges
that opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations
expressed in Ritualised Belonging, generated by the NRF supported
research (Grant Numbers: 118579), is that of the authors, and that
the NRF accepts no liability whatsoever in this regard.
There is an immense and growing literature on singing in relation
to a number of areas, often associated with wellbeing of various
kinds - physical, mental, emotional, communal, public and
spiritual. Although spirituality is mentioned in much of the
literature it is often as an addendum to other more measurable
aspects of the experience/event. This volume consists of various
approaches to the spirituality of the singing experience,
particularly how these have changed or even been heightened during
the current pandemic. This collection offers a number of very
wide-ranging perspectives from across the world. The chapters are
drawn from several cultures and include a number referring to the
various lockdowns that have characterized the pandemic. The book
includes a mixture of chapters - which incorporate academic
references and discourse - and interludes that are more reflective
accounts of individual experiences.
This volume focuses on the ways in which mutual musical engagement
might play a role in creating healthful, life-giving experiences.
Scholarly chapters and reflective interludes illustrate how people
use music to forge authentic spiritual and emotional connections
with others, including in times of physical isolation and political
unrest. Chapters and interludes address topics such as relationship
building, community, wellbeing, therapy, education, and ecology.
Each describes various ways in which individuals connect
authentically with themselves, others, the music they make, and the
physical and spiritual world around them. Many authors address
current global crises including the COVID-19 pandemic, racism,
nationalism, environmental injustice, and associated climate
catastrophes. Authors articulate various qualities of authentic
human connections, and discuss various ways in which music might be
poised to facilitate emotional and spiritual connections in some of
the most challenging and physically isolating times.
Our age owes Sir John Tavener deep gratitude. His works cross both
cultural and disciplinary boundaries. He illustrated how to deal
with intense suffering and felt deeply for the suffering of the
world. He stands as an icon representing a view of artistic
expression as a way of generating hope and transcendence. In
Tavener's thinking, spirituality was closely tied to wellbeing and
healing and this book considers the spiritual encounters that
brought him 'heart's ease' and the communication of that experience
to performers and listeners through his composition. The
contributors to this book include scholars, musicians, theologians,
medical practitioners, informed listeners and practitioners in
religious traditions. It includes case study material, empirical
studies, philosophical, theological and theoretical contributions
along with accounts from lived experience of the spirituality
generated by Tavener's music. This is set in the context of a world
that sees spirituality sometimes coupled and sometimes uncoupled
from religion. The pattern of the book is an alternation between
interludes and chapters illuminating different facets of the
crystal of Tavener's creative work and the spirituality and
'heart's ease' it can offer.
The relationship between Christian theology and music has been
complex since the early days of the Church. In the twentieth
century the secularization of Western culture has led to further
complexity. The search for the soul, following Nietzsche's
declaration of the Death of God has led to an increasing body of
literature in many fields on spirituality. This book is an attempt
to open up a conversation between these related discourses, with
contributions reflecting a range of perspectives within them. It is
not the final word on the relationship but expresses a conviction
about their relationship. Collecting together such a variety of
approaches allows new understandings to emerge from their
juxtaposition and collation. This book will contribute to the
ongoing debate between theology, spirituality, culture and the
arts. It includes contexts with structured relationships between
music and the Church alongside situations where spirituality and
music are explored with sometimes distant echoes of Divinity and
ancient theologies reinterpreted for the contemporary world.
This book concerns an examination of the totality of the musical
experience with a view to restoring the soul within it. It starts
with an analysis of the strands in the landscape of contemporary
spirituality. It examines the descriptors spiritual but not
religious, and spiritual and religious, looking in particular at
the place of faith narratives in various spiritualities. These
strands are linked with the domains of the musicking experience:
Materials, Expression, Construction and Values. The book sets out a
model of the spiritual experience as a negotiated relationship
between the musicker and the music. It looks in detail at various
models of musicking drawn from music therapy, ethnomusicology,
musicology and cultural studies. It examines the relationship
between Christianity and music as well as examining some practical
projects showing the effect of various Value systems in musicking,
particularly in intercultural dialogue. It finally proposes an
ecclesiology of musical events that includes both orate and
literate traditions and so is supportive of inclusive community.
The book seeks to examine the areas of values and spirituality as
expressed in the theology primarily in Europe and the USA.
Following theorists such as Foucault, Belenky and Dorothy Smith a
model for examining western culture and where the Christian
traditions sit within it is set out. It looks at how various value
systems become subjugated and that this process happens within both
the self and society. The tradition of Christianity in its first
three centuries saw women in positions of authority in some
traditions and a fluid theology which included feminine figures in
the notion of the Divine. The loss of the feminine in the divine
and women's authority in the Church went hand in hand and are
inextricable linked together. After this a male trinity dominated
theology with characteristics such as triumphalism, clarity, order,
eternality and unity. Although there has been evidence of a
feminine Wisdom tradition that has surfaced occasionally in
Christianity, this has often been more hidden and less public. The
last half of the twentieth century has seen an attempt to unearth
the hidden theological tradition. This book links this with the
rediscovery of subjugated value systems and what it might mean for
ecclesiology.
The book seeks to examine the areas of values and spirituality as
expressed in the theology primarily in Europe and the USA.
Following theorists such as Foucault, Belenky and Dorothy Smith a
model for examining western culture and where the Christian
traditions sit within it is set out. It looks at how various value
systems become subjugated and that this process happens within both
the self and society. The tradition of Christianity in its first
three centuries saw women in positions of authority in some
traditions and a fluid theology which included feminine figures in
the notion of the Divine. The loss of the feminine in the divine
and women's authority in the Church went hand in hand and are
inextricable linked together. After this a male trinity dominated
theology with characteristics such as triumphalism, clarity, order,
eternality and unity. Although there has been evidence of a
feminine Wisdom tradition that has surfaced occasionally in
Christianity, this has often been more hidden and less public. The
last half of the twentieth century has seen an attempt to unearth
the hidden theological tradition. This book links this with the
rediscovery of subjugated value systems and what it might mean for
ecclesiology.
This book is intended to challenge the status quo of music learning
and experience by intersecting various musical topics with
discussions of spirituality and queer studies. Spanning from the
theoretical to the personal, the authors utilize a variety of
approaches to query how music makers might blend spirituality's
healing and wholeness with queer theory's radical liberation.
Queering Freedom: Music, Identity and Spirituality represents an
eclectic mix of historical, ethnomusicological, case study,
narrative, ethnodramatic, philosophical, theological, and
theoretical contributions. The book reaches an international
audience, with invited authors from around the world who represent
the voices and perspectives of over ten countries. The authors
engage with policy, practice, and performance to critically address
contemporary and historical music practices. Through its broad and
varied writing styles and representations, the collection aims to
shift perspectives of possibility and invite readers to envision a
fresh, organic, and more holistic musical experience.
This book is an auto-ethnographic account of the development of a
charismatic community choir leader. It brings together management
literature and a survey of the community choir scene with the
development of community choir leadership. It provides a useful
introduction to the sustaining of community choirs, including the
use of English folksong material in this context. Some useful
arrangements of folk songs are included. Community singing events
are described with helpful advice on setting up and managing these.
It presents a useful model of the range of skills necessary for
aspiring community choir leaders. This is linked with the formation
of a community that contains spiritual elements; this is theorized
in relation to the role of the parish church in communal singing.
It also discusses the two aesthetics of choral singing and the
relationship between oral and literate traditions. The book arises
from the engagement of the University of Winchester in partnership
with the local community, which is theorized.
This book is an autobiographical account of the development of an
authentic interiority. It charts the way in which the Christian
faith in which the author was enculturated was refined by her lived
experience of music, abuse, forgiveness, interfaith dialogue,
gender and vocation (into teaching and priesthood). The author
describes how music and spirituality can create a route into
forgiveness by creatively transforming ("mulching") childhood abuse
into celebration. Her work challenges established therapeutic
models and suggests a variety of alternative tools, including
created ritual. The volume is set out as a series of meditations on
the themes contained in the Lord's Prayer; it can be read in
separate sections, as well as in its totality. The author's life is
perceived as a crystal that can be viewed through various lenses,
illustrated by different styles of writing. These include narrative
accounts written in a personal style; hymns, songs and poems that
condense her thinking around a theme; and more academic reflection,
using other people's writing and experiences to understand her own.
June Boyce-Tillman's new book identifies and discusses the very
issues that could render the education that we offer through music
more engaging and relevent to those whom we teach. The book
presents a wide-ranging and rich mix of psychological,
ethnomusicological, philosophical, educational, mythological and
theological material. Into this rich tapestry is woven a concern to
consider seriously New Age phenomena and to empathize with people's
experiences and life stories. Very occasionally, a book is
published that has the potential of seriously challenging current
orthodoxy and practice. This is such a book.' - British Journal of
Music Education. 'June Boyce-Tillman has published this beautifully
researched essay at what I think may prove to be a vital
re-balancing point in our history, when there is a developing
realisation that post-Enlightenment culture with its emphasis on
scientific reason and logic needs to incorporate again the
"subjugated ways of knowing" as June Boyce-Tillman terms Gooch's
value "system B" which favours being, subjectivity, personal
feeling, emotion, magic, involvement, associative ways of knowing,
belief and non-causal knowledge... The bibliography and referencing
are excellent, massively extending the hub of resource which this
book itself presents for further study, investigation and good
practice by people from many walks of life. Many thanks to June
Boyce-Tillman for her work.' - The Christian Parapsychologist 'In
Constructing Musical Healing, June Boyce-Tillman attempts to blend
ancient and modern ideas and practices with her own perspective as
a New Age practitioner. In an interdisciplinary effort,
Boyce-Tillman describer particular philosophical aspects concerning
Western music, practices of shamans and healers, and explorations
of the new consciousness reflected in the New Age movement and
music therapy. Her goal is to establish a new model of healing as
balance including physical, psychological, and spiritual elements
in a process approach, which she parallels with music therapy
practice...Boyce-Tillman has some promising ideas. And certainly
she adds her words, her thoughts, and beliefs to the continuing
questions about the compatibility between "healing" and
"therapy"...The strength of the book is that it has the potential
to encourage our own discourse by giving us an opportunity to
compare and contrast our own ideas about music therapy with at
least one New Age practitioner.' - The Arts in Psychotherapy
Drawing on literature from philosophy, anthropology, psychology and
musicology, Boyce-Tillman looks at musical traditions and notions
of healing in different societies. Her work includes a number of
case studies in various cultures - spirit possession cults in
Africa and shamans in various traditions. It explores contemporary
musical practice in the New Age including neo-shamanism and notions
of musical healing in Western musical aesthetics. The use of music
in Western medicine is also studied, as Boyce-Tillman draws
together a theory of what actually occurs when music is associated
with therapeutic intention and examines the role of music within
healthcare, education and the community.
Making the case for the relevance of pastoral care today, this book
explores the role of pastoral care through the prism of music.
Using musical analogies, the author provides a new way of
understanding and practising pastoral care, grounded in practical
theology. Challenging overemphasis on mission, he shows that
pastoral care remains essential to the life of the church,
especially when engaging with extreme situations such as dying,
suffering or war, and considers the role of pastoral carers in the
specific pastoral encounter and in the life of the church in
general.
About the Contributor(s): Bernadette Flanagan is Director of
Research at All Hallows College (Dublin City University). She is
the author of The Spirit of the City (1999) and coeditor of With
Wisdom Seeking God (2008) and of Spiritual Capital (2012).
This book explores the alliance of theology and music in the
Christian liturgical tradition, interrogating the challenges posed
by the gendered nature of church leadership in many areas of its
life. It examines the relationship between theology, spirituality
and music, concentrating on women's perceptions of these. The title
draws on the Report of the Archbishop's Commission on Church Music
from 1992 which was entitled In Tune with Heaven. It questions the
absence of women's voices and experiences from the literature and
attempts to redress this. It sets out the values that underpin
Christian musical liturgical traditions primarily in Europe and the
USA with a view to understanding where women are situated within or
outside these traditions. It draws on material from many interviews
with contemporary practitioners from a variety of contexts. It does
not set out to be a definitive history of women in these traditions
but simply to give some small vignettes that illustrate a variety
of positions that they have occupied in various denominations - and
thus make their often hidden contributions more visible.
|
You may like...
The Northman
Alexander Skarsgard, Nicole Kidman, …
Blu-ray disc
(1)
R210
Discovery Miles 2 100
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Holy Fvck
Demi Lovato
CD
R414
Discovery Miles 4 140
|