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   <front>
      <journal-meta>
         <journal-id journal-id-type="DOAJ">15041611</journal-id>
         <journal-title-group>
            <journal-title>Voices: A World Forum for Music Therapy</journal-title>
         </journal-title-group>
         <issn>1504-1611</issn>
         <publisher>
            <publisher-name>Grieg Academy Music Therapy Research Centre, Uni Research
               Health</publisher-name>
         </publisher>
      </journal-meta>
      <article-meta>
         <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.15845/voices.v18i3.2571</article-id>
         <article-categories>
            <subj-group subj-group-type="heading">
               <subject>Invited Submission</subject>
            </subj-group>
         </article-categories>
         <title-group>
            <article-title>Tribute to Carolyn Kenny</article-title>
         </title-group>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="author">
               <name>
                  <surname>Aigen</surname>
                  <given-names>Kenneth</given-names>
               </name>
               <xref ref-type="aff" rid="K_Aigen"/>
               <address>
                  <email>ken.aigen@gmail.com</email>
               </address>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <aff id="K_Aigen"><label>1</label>New York University, United States</aff>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="editor">
               <name>
                  <surname>McFerran</surname>
                  <given-names>Katrina</given-names>
               </name>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="reviewer">
               <name>
                  <surname>Stige</surname>
                  <given-names>Brynjulf</given-names>
               </name>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <pub-date pub-type="pub">
            <day>15</day>
            <month>10</month>
            <year>2018</year>
         </pub-date>
         <volume>18</volume>
         <issue>3</issue>
         <history>
            <date date-type="received">
               <day>31</day>
               <month>8</month>
               <year>2018</year>
            </date>
            <date date-type="accepted">
               <day>24</day>
               <month>9</month>
               <year>2018</year>
            </date>
         </history>
         <permissions>
            <copyright-statement>Copyright: 2018 The Author(s)</copyright-statement>
            <copyright-year>2018</copyright-year>
         </permissions>
         <self-uri xlink:href="https://dx.doi.org/10.15845/voices.v18i3.2571"
            >https://dx.doi.org/10.15845/voices.v18i3.2571</self-uri>
      </article-meta>
   </front>
   <body>
         <p>This piece is based on the Preface to Music &amp; Life in the Field of Play: An
            Anthology that was published in 2006, with permission from Barcelona Publishers.</p>
      <p>My thoughts about Carolyn Kenny as a human being and as a scholar were best encapsulated by
         a preface that I wrote for an anthology of her writings, <italic>Music and Life in the
            Field of Play</italic> (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K2006">Kenny, 2006</xref>). Although
         music exists in time, Carolyn always emphasized to me that, for her, the primary way of
         understanding music was through spatial metaphors—music created and transformed space.
         Similarly, a text is something that exists in time—we experience someone’s writings the way
         that we experience music: through the flow of time. In reconsidering this preface it
         strikes me that my introduction to Carolyn’s work was a spatial one: Carolyn’s words
         created a place to be—a home—for music therapists concerned with the more perennial aspects
         of our work. It was this quality of her writing that I chose to write about.</p>
      <p>It is because the essence of Carolyn’s being was the source of her scholarly work, that a
         piece written about her writing, could also be the clearest tribute to her as a person. The
         remainder of this tribute is a very slightly edited version of the preface from her book. I
         hope that it entices you, the reader of this tribute, to visit Carolyn’s writings on your
         intellectual excursions. I promise you that it will be a rewarding journey.</p>
      <p>Welcome, come in, come inhabit this space. You may think that you are beginning a book, but
         you are entering a place, a space, an environment inhabited by complex, contemporary ideas
         and ancient wisdom, a place created by a comprehensive intellect and a warm heart, a region
         where you will find your thinking stimulated and ancient feelings stirred that you didn’t
         know existed within you. The writings of Carolyn Kenny embody all of these things.</p>
      <p>Lists. Categories. Carolyn will be the first to say that these things are overrated as
         products of scholarly work. However, sometimes categories are useful, not in defining a
         person or her work, but in suggesting the scope of her interests and influence. The breadth
         of Carolyn’s work is overwhelming in all of its scholarly roots and applications</p>
      <p>In her writings she has applied the following <italic>domains of inquiry</italic> to music
         therapy: philosophy of science, qualitative research, anthropology, religious studies,
         ritual studies, and aesthetics. The following <italic>schools of thought</italic> or
            <italic>theoretical perspectives</italic> have been used as tools in Carolyn’s writings:
         systems thinking, field theory, ecological perspectives, phenomenology, ritual criticism,
         and narrative. In music therapy, she has been at the forefront of developments in
         qualitative research, general theory, and music-centered theory.</p>
      <p>More importantly to Carolyn, I’m sure, are the values that permeate her writings. These are
         things that she believes in deeply and that motivate, inform, and guide her work. Rather
         than skim through this list, take even a moment to consider each one, because it is a
         significant achievement in life to establish a professional academic career with these
         values at the center of one’s being. And perhaps Carolyn has been able to be so uniquely
         successful at it because the idea of establishing a career has never been her agenda. It
         has been to live a personal and professional life guided by these values. These are themes
         that constantly emerge in her writings: Connection, Relation, Interdependence, Respect for
         All People, Respect for Nature, Cultural Sensitivity, Exploration, The Role of Context,
         Caring for the Community, The Self in Relation to Community, and last, Integration. That
         is, the Integration of research, theory, and practice; the academic and the practical; the
         intellectual, affective, sensory, physical, and spiritual; the aesthetic and the
         scientific, and the ancient and the modern. Parsing, separation, and categorization are
         alien to Carolyn’s writing. Establishing integration, connection, and relation in the
         service of beautifying the world is her agenda.</p>
      <p>Carolyn has always been there for me in the sense of repeatedly carving out intellectual
         territories that I found myself pursuing. In 1983 I was a master’s student in music therapy
         working on my thesis. I was dissatisfied with the existing rationales for music therapy
         practice that originated in psychology and psychotherapy and I wanted to write about how
         through music therapy the modern world was rediscovering the ancient purpose for which
         music was created. Carolyn’s work <italic>The Mythic Artery: The Magic of Music
            Therapy</italic> was the only publication in this area. A few years later I took up
         doctoral studies at New York University because of my interest in qualitative research.
         Carolyn’s PhD dissertation <italic>The Field of Play</italic> was there as a guiding light,
         serving as the first English language qualitative study in music therapy. In 1991 I wrote
         an article examining the connection between a reverence for nature and music therapy
         practice. Carolyn’s writings were again the only place I found similar sentiments. And in
         the late 1990s I began working on the idea of a more general, integrative theory in music
         therapy that could bring together psychological, music-centered, and ritual-based thinking.
         Yet again, I found support in Carolyn’s writings for this project, both in its specifics
         and in its general premise.</p>
      <p>I am certain that this pattern of discovery has been followed by countless other music
         therapy students and professionals. Carolyn does not have a clinical method or facility
         that carries her name, and she is not identified with any single way of practicing music
         therapy. Her writings span many different books, journals, and scholarly areas of
         publication. Her ideas can be applied within many different clinical approaches. The
         contribution of people like her can get overlooked because there is no one overtly carrying
         her flag. That is why this book is so important. It gathers in one place the writings and
         thinking of a unique and seminal figure in music therapy. And it does so in a way that the
         connections among them can be established and Carolyn’s body of work can be seen in both
         its coherence and imaginative variety.</p>
      <p>I would like to include one example of Carolyn’s words in this preface to whet your appetite
         for what awaits you in this book. It is from the work Keeping the World in Balance and it
         really cuts to the heart of her beliefs:</p>
      <disp-quote>
         <p>Thought and language, along with the arts, are expressions that can help to fulfill the
            Navajo responsibility to beautify the Earth. For the Navajo, beautifying the Earth is a
            moral obligation and the essential goal of one’s life if one is to lead a good life. For
            the Navajo, beautifying the Earth means keeping the world in balance. (p. 165)</p>
      </disp-quote>
      <p>Through her life and work, Carolyn Kenny has both beautified the Earth and helped to keep
         music therapy in balance. I am confident that the readers of this book will find themselves
         similarly transformed.</p>
      
   </body>
   <back>
      <ref-list>
         <ref id="K2006">
            <!--Kenny, C. (2006). <italic>Music and life in the field of play: An anthology.</italic> Gilsum, NH: Barcelona.-->
            <element-citation publication-type="book" publication-format="print">
               <person-group person-group-type="author">
                  <name>
                     <surname>Kenny</surname>
                     <given-names>C</given-names>
                  </name>
               </person-group>
               <year>2006</year>
               <source>Music and life in the field of play: An anthology</source>
               <publisher-loc>Gilsum, NH</publisher-loc>
               <publisher-name>Barcelona</publisher-name>
            </element-citation>
         </ref>
      </ref-list>
   </back>
</article>
