Author(s)
Anne StoneKeywords
Progressive educationJohn Dewey
Donald Finkel
Music appreciation
Music
M1-5000
Music and books on Music
M
Musical instruction and study
MT1-960
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Show full item recordAbstract
As I prepared recently to teach a seminar for doctoral students on how to teach undergraduate music history I came face to face with my reservations about traditional teaching of these subjects. The book Teaching with your Mouth Shut by Donald Finkel seemed to me to offer a compelling way to approach undergraduate teaching that is intellectually sound and ethically appealing and caused me to change my approach to teaching the seminar.Date
2016-12-01Type
ArticleIdentifier
oai:doaj.org/article:f6ac03e6b5b1494d8650e48ff84449522039-9715
10.6092/issn.2039-9715/6579
https://doaj.org/article/f6ac03e6b5b1494d8650e48ff8444952
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Music and Healing: Progress Towards ElysiumCoghlan, Michael; Wilson, Catherine Elizabeth (2017-07-26)This dissertation explores some of the many roles music, as a healing and nurturing art, plays in support of health and wellness. The fundamental question is how does music nurture, revive, animate, and inspire us to lead healthier and richer lives? Historical and modern sources, ranging from ancient philosophical works to reports of laboratory-based investigations, suggests that music is a remarkably positive and therapeutic element in the development of happier, healthier individuals, and well-adjusted societies. This study is the outcome of three deeply personal impulses: a) the experience of one who has personally benefited from music as a healing balm; b) the performer's desire to better understand the positive reactions, both emotional and physical, of audiences to specific musical selections and genres; and c) growing evidence that society is weakened and dulled (nor can foot feel, being shod) by the loss of the collective experience of live music due to the proliferation of digital technologies that facilitate access to a complexity of recorded music choices. There is compelling scientific documentation that experience listening to and creating live music when very young is especially beneficial. If the positive seeds of music are not planted in youth, the continued disintegration of the long-standing cultural musical institutions that serve a vital role in maintaining the social fabric is threatened.
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