Subtitle:
When psyche sings
Place of Publication:
London, United Kingdom
Publisher:
Routledge (an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group)
Copyright Date:
2019
ISBN / SBN / ISSN:
9781138625662
Media Type:
Print (Non-Serial)
Media Sub-type:
Book
LoC Call Number:
ML 3920 .K86 2019
Accession Number:
095447
Keyword Subject Headings:
Music--Psychological aspects
Music--Therapeutic uses of / Archetypal music psychotherapy
Sound--Psychological aspects
Reverie--Musically induced
Symbolism--Psychology--Musical phenomena
Jung, C.G. (Carl Gustav) 1875-1961--Relationship to music
Music--Therapeutic uses of / Archetypal music psychotherapy
Sound--Psychological aspects
Reverie--Musically induced
Symbolism--Psychology--Musical phenomena
Jung, C.G. (Carl Gustav) 1875-1961--Relationship to music
User Notes:
Paperbound; xx + 187 pp., including bibliographic references
in chapter endnotes and an index.
The author is an OFJ speaker.
Contents:
About the book
Foreword (Mark Winborn)
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1. "The Red Album": Jung's relationship with music
2. The musical cure: Cultural amplification of music healing throughout history
3. Music as an orienting force: The place of music within analytical psychology
4. A lexicon without language: How musical thinking transcends the confines
of grammar
5. A conspicuous silence: The absence of music in analytical psychology
6. What is music?: [Music = time + sound]
7. Working analytically with musical symbols: A natural next step from
Jung's original version
8. Archetypal musical psychotherapy (AMP): Analysis through musical processes
9. The musical field: Processing the symbiotic auditory ecosystem
10. Bilocation and the composer's vantage point: Some hints on setting
the frame from the world of the sound poet
11. The scope of a music-oriented approach: On beauty, ethics and the role
of creativity
12. Musical approaches to analytic technique: Navigating the dual role
of musician and analyst
13. Amplifying musical symbols: Example #1: Tonal centre as the musical
archetype of home
14. In conclusion …: Musical reverie as a profound investigation of oneself
Index
