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American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine®
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Article

Music as Language

Trisha Ready, PhD student*

Pacifica Graduate Institute

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: ready{at}wolfenet.com.


   Abstract

This article is an inquiry into the potential role of music in helping to address and to articulate complex emotional states such as the feelings patients might experience during the process of an illness or while undergoing bereavement. The article is centered on the role music played in structuring and articulating the cancer treatment experience of my infant nephew. What is woven around that central core is a synthesis and analysis of various philosophical perspectives, autobiographical vignettes, and empirical research. The writer postulates that music has an essential, inherent capacity to scaffold and contain emotions. Music is also considered a means to help facilitate the expression of difficult emotions such as lamentation, longing, and fear of the unknown that are often otherwise isolating, ineffable, or unbearable for patients. A major point of inquiry in this article is whether music can serve as a nurturing love object, or as a transitional object, for a patient during times of intense distress. What is also woven throughout this article is a subexploration of various philosophical perspectives on the cultural meanings and metaphors of illness.

First published on July 1, 2009
American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine® 2009, doi:10.1177/1049909109338387


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