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Full Description
Many young people rely on music to guide them through the good and bad times of their lives. Whether immersing themselves in music to process emotions or creating music as a means of self-expression, it provides a powerful outlet that can help young people navigate the turbulence of adolescence.
Centred around the three key areas of emotion, identity, and connectedness, the Handbook of Music, Adolescents, and Wellbeing provides insights into the relationship between music and young people, exploring questions such as: why do teenagers have such a passionate relationship with music? Why this is even more apparent and important during times of difficulty? How can music be utilised to enhance wellbeing?
With 26 authors from around the globe, this book canvasses a wide range of perspectives, from the most scientific to the most practical. Each chapter contains insightful stories from the authors' own experiences working with young people, and brings together the latest theory, research, and practice from the fields of music therapy, music psychology, music education, and music sociology to explore and understand how and why music plays such a big part in young lives.
The first section addresses the popular topic of music and emotions, clarifying the ways that young people can learn to use music intentionally to achieve healthy outcomes. The second section looks at identity construction, emphasising agency in the ways that young people choose to express themselves both personally and to others. The third section explores connectedness, with a particular emphasis on uses of technology to connect with others.
This book will be of interest to music therapists, youth and social workers, psychologists, counsellors, occupational therapists, teachers, parents, and anyone interested in promoting adolescent wellbeing through music.
Contents
Part 1. Emotions
1: Katrina McFerran: Crystallizing the Relationship between Adolescents, Music and Emotions
2: Andeline dos Santos: Group Music Therapy with Adolescents Referred for Aggression
3: Genevieve Dingle, Leah Sharman and Joel Larwood: Young People's Uses of Music for Emotional Immersion
4: Tan-Chyuan Chin: Measuring Adolescents' Emotional Responses to Music: Approaches, Challenges and Opportunities
5: Josephine Geipel: Between Down in the Dumps and Over the Moon: Music Therapy for Young people with Depression
6: Margarida Baltazar: Musical Affect Regulation in Adolescents: A Conceptual Model
7: Andreas Wölfl: Music and Violence: Working with Youth to Prevent Violence
Part 2. Identity
8: Suvi Saarikallio: Music as a resource for agency and empowerment in identity construction
9: Dave Miranda: Personality Traits and Music in Adolescence
10: Alexandra Lamont and David Hargreaves: Musical Preference and Social Identity in Adolescence
11: Tia De Nora: 'For ever piping songs for ever new': the musical teenager and musical inner teenager across the life course
12: Viggo Krüger: Music as a Structuring Resource in Identity Formation Processes by Adolescents Engaging in Music Therapy - A Case Story from a Norwegian Child Welfare Setting. 'Hey ho, let's go' (The Ramones)
13: Daphne Rickson: Working in Music with Adolescents who Experience Disability
14: Elly Scrine: Reframing Inclusivity: The Importance of Exploring Gender and Sexuality in Music Therapy with All Young People
Part 3. Connectedness
15: Philippa Derrington: 'What's the WiFi code in Here?' Connecting with Adolescents in Music Therapy
16: Susan A. O'Neill: Entangled Musical Lives: Affordances of Spaces in Young People's Music Engagement for Connectedness and Wellbeing
17: Andy Bennett and Lisa Nikulinsky: Wellbeing, Young People and Music Scenes
18: Helen Oosthuizen: 'There is a Good Spot in my Heart': A Story of a Music Therapy Group that Enables Young Sex Offenders to Reconnect with Themselves, Their Stories and Their Communities
19: Roseann Pluretti and Piotr S. Bobkowski: Social Media, Adolescent Developmental Tasks and Music
20: Michael Viega: Globalizing Adolescence: Digital Music Cultures and Music Therapy
21: Carmen Cheong-Clinch: My iPod, YouTube and Our Playlists: Connections Made In and Beyond Therapy