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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.v18i3.2582</article-id>
         <article-categories>
            <subj-group subj-group-type="heading">
               <subject>Invited Submission</subject>
            </subj-group>
         </article-categories>
         <title-group>
            <article-title>Phenomenology in the Field of Play: Direct Experience, Aesthetics and
               Interpretation</article-title>
         </title-group>
         <contrib-group>
            <contrib contrib-type="author">
               <name>
                  <surname>Merrill</surname>
                  <given-names>Theresa R.</given-names>
               </name>
               <xref ref-type="aff" rid="T_Merrill"/>
               <address>
                  <email>tmerril1@emich.edu</email>
               </address>
            </contrib>
         </contrib-group>
         <aff id="T_Merrill"><label>1</label>Eastern Michigan University</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>30</day>
               <month>8</month>
               <year>2018</year>
            </date>
            <date date-type="accepted">
               <day>4</day>
               <month>10</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.v18i3.2582"
            >https://dx.doi.org/10.15845/voices.v18i3.2582</self-uri>
      </article-meta>
   </front>
   <body>
      <p>Authors note: I came to know Carolyn Kenny personally during my graduate studies with her
         in the early 1990’s in Vancouver, BC Canada. We maintained a close friendship which began
         as a mentoring relationship and was the inspiration for my doctoral dissertation: <italic>Wise
            Guides: Portraits of Mentoring Relationships in Music Therapy</italic> (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="M2009"
               >Merrill, 2009</xref>). I came to
         understand and experience Field of Play theory over the next 15 years and observed ways in
         which it deepened and performed itself in her work and writing. Later, Carolyn and I
         attended a Phenomenology Symposium at Duquesne University together in 2013 and had long and
         interesting discussions about phenomenology – and in particular – why music therapists are
         well positioned to have intimate knowledge of it due to our proximity to human suffering.
         The time we spent together discussing her theory and my studies over the years of our
         friendship left me with precious insights to the interplay of life experience, beauty and
         the unique and compassionate worldview that made her contributions to music therapy theory
         significant. Personally, Carolyn has been the most influential person in my career. Her
         contribution to my life incalculable. It is an honor to participate in this special edition
         of Voices.</p>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Music Therapy Theory, Intersectionality and Lived Experience</title>
         <p>Carolyn Kenny lived a highly intersubjective and intersectional life. Her
            intersectionality was performed across a range of interdisciplinary work, music therapy
            practice, theorizing, writing and in her personal life. She experienced a sense of
            marginalization across many of these intersections (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1996b"
               >Kenny, 1996b</xref>, <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K2006"> 2006</xref>). She identified
            as an interdisciplinarian (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K2006">Kenny, 2006</xref>):
            philosopher, music therapist, sacred psychologist, poet, indigenous studies scholar, and
            feminist. Indeed, she proposed a view of music therapy <italic>as</italic> an
            interdiscipline (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1989">Kenny, 1989, p. 18</xref>; <xref
               ref-type="bibr" rid="K2006">2006, p. 91</xref>). Her worldview – that all creation is
            interconnected (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K2006">Kenny, 2006 p. 95</xref>) – became
            central to her theoretical contributions and ontological assumptions.</p>
         <p>In <italic>The Field of Play</italic> (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1989"
            >1989</xref>), Kenny describes the aesthetic of the human person – client OR therapist
            as ‘a field of beauty’— containing a range of individual, idiosyncratic conditions. An
            environment similar to “the alpine meadow, the swamp, or the prairie, and full of
            beauty” (p. 74)… “surrounded by beauty and including the individual’s human tendencies,
            values, attitudes, life experience, and all factors that unite to create the whole and
            complete form of beauty, which is the person” (p. 75). In today’s parlance, she alludes
            to a worldview that is intersectional, but in its holistic inner view, all merge as an
            aesthetic whole. I like to think of Carolyn in this way. As a person, she was all of her
            identities, but she was certainly more than the sum of those parts and she expressed and
            performed herself in the world as an aesthetic whole.</p>
         <p>She was concerned with metaphysics (the nature of being) ultimately; and in particular
            embraced the work of Edmund Husserl, Maurice Merleau-Ponty and later, Hans Georg
            Gadamer. With these influences and others, her philosophical theoretical orientation
            embraced both Philosophical Phenomenology and Hermeneutics (<xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="S2007">Schwandt, 2007</xref>). While Kenny certainly began exploring a
            relationship between theory building and direct experience in her 1982 book <italic>The
               Mythic Artery</italic>, it is her 1989 work (based on her doctoral dissertation)
               <italic>The Field of Play: A guide for the theory and practice of music therapy
               </italic>(<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1989">Kenny, 1989</xref>) that represents a
            fully fleshed-out theoretical ‘model of being’ based in philosophical phenomenology and
            to a lesser extent hermeneutics. It also represents the public expression of her
            thinking on the matter of philosophy as a basis for indigenous music therapy theory.
            From my perspective, <italic>Field of Play</italic> represents the first fully
            articulated theory of music therapy, so when discussing Kenny’s contribution(s), it is
            important to include an exploration of her connection to Phenomenology— which at the
            time seemed to offer a unique contribution to theoretical discourse within our
            discipline. To be more precise, in 1987, phenomenology was being utilized as a research
            methodology by other researchers but to my awareness, Kenny was the first to direct the
            phenomenological epistemology toward theory building. Her contribution represents an
            alternative view to ‘outcomes-based extra-musical/ behavioral orientation common in
            North American practice at the time, to a philosophical focus on the direct experiences
            of clients and therapists.</p>
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Origins and Influences</title>
         <p>Carolyn, in speaking about her intellectual development, first credited her education
            with “The Jesuits” (presumably at Loyola University where she completed an undergraduate
            degree) who introduced her to philosophical thought and argument. She would smile and
            say, “Well, you know, I studied with the Jesuits”. Her interdisciplinary studies Masters
            at the University of British Columbia embedded her in Indigenous and Mythic
            perspectives, but it was during her doctoral studies in Psychology at The Fielding
            Institute where she was a student of famed Qualitative Researcher/Theorist Renata Tesch,
            that she was drawn to integrate her clinical experiences with philosophical
            underpinnings. She notes, ”If theory serves as the foundations for practice, philosophy
            serves as the foundation for theory” (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1989">1989, p.
               46</xref>). Tesch most certainly influenced The Field of Play (along with Music
            Therapist William Sears), which began as her Doctoral Dissertation. Yet, she diverged
            from Tesch (who was primarily a methodologist) and went her own way to establish
            discipline-specific foundations between Phenomenology, Hermeneutics and Aesthetics as
            they pertain to the theory and practice of music therapy.</p>
         <p>Kenny famously wrote her dissertation in ‘the desert’ near Ojai, California, during a
            catastrophic brush fire. As she described the story to me, she felt that her writing was
            disconnected from her true experience—written for others; over-intellectualized and
            distanced from the direct experience of music therapy. So, she consigned the whole of
            her dissertation (as it was) to the flames and started over in a way that she felt was
            more resonant with her lived experience as a music therapist. Her understanding of
            essential links between Phenomenology, Aesthetics and Field Theory resulted in “The
            Field of Play”, which again, is the first published attempt at articulating an
            indigenous theory of music therapy. It should be noted that at the time of the
            publication of Field of Play (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1989">1989</xref>), other
            music therapists were exploring phenomenological inquiry as well. Most notably, Ruud
               (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="R1987">1987</xref>) in Norweigan and then Forinash and
            Gonzalez (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="FG1989">1989</xref>) in English. What made Kenny’s
            contribution seminal among them was the use of aesthetic replication in the <italic>Free
               Phantasy Variation</italic> (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="R1987">1987, p. 58</xref>)
            and the subsequent extrapolation to theory.</p>
         <p>It has been established that Kenny’s thoughts did not develop in a vacuum. It is also
            important to note that the release of her English language work coincided with a larger
            disciplinary discourse—in particular the music in the life of man conference. While no one individual discussed phenomenology per se, the collective
            seemed to be searching for more authentic means of understanding and describing the
            experience in music therapy (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="FK2015">Forinash &amp; Kenny,
               2015</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="M2016">Merrill, 2016</xref>).</p>
         <p>Her experience growing up as a racial minority in the United States caused her to also
            be interested in liberation through the arts. She believed that engaging in the
            arts—especially as therapy— gave access to conditions of consciousness where the fully
            functioning human could access, create, communicate and inter-relate from a place of
            whole-ness; and in so doing be liberated from oppressive systemic normative values
               (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1996a">Kenny, 1996a</xref>). This process was mythic in
            its depth and scope (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1982">Kenny, 1982,</xref>, <xref
               ref-type="bibr" rid="K1996a">1996a</xref>, <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K2006"
               >2006</xref>). She believed that modernity and post-modernity as greater social
            influences alienated people from what it meant to be human and states:</p>
         <disp-quote>
            <p>We have outgrown the need to create symbolic forms which reassure us about the
               continuity of humanity and the world as a whole…what aspect of our personal and
               cultural development have we left behind in sacrificing value for our mythology? We
               have left behind an artistic way of being. (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1980">Kenny
                  1980, p. 5</xref>)</p>
         </disp-quote>
         <p>She did not separate music therapists from those who received music therapy in this. She
            felt that embracing scientific ethos to the exclusion of the aesthetic and mythic
            served to separate therapists from their own humanness: those conditions which provide a
            basis for inter-personal connection and shared consciousness. The therapist, as an
            explicit, equal and active player in the field of play dynamic, is viewed as a whole
            aesthetic as well. This was contrary to the dominant narrative of the time, where the
            therapist strove to distance themselves in order to approach pure objectivity, to
            eradicate counter-transferences, to create a blank slate or to enforce normative values
            in the application of stimulus and reward.</p>
         <p>Furthermore, Kenny believed that ultimate whole-ing and healing could be authentically
            accessed through the Arts within a shared space. This is Kenny’s Ontology. The path to
            such whole-ing involved becoming liberated from ideas and frameworks that were rigid and
            essentialist in nature through a search for essences within the shared aesthetic. This
            idea is resonant with Husserl’s idea of the transcendent reduction (<xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="KC2015">Käufer &amp; Chimero, 2015</xref>). In more recent, personal
            conversations, she maintained that a preliminary and necessary step had to do with
            awareness – what she referred to in The Field of Play as ‘a particular state of
            consciousness’ – and described this as “a state of deep concentration and focused
            attention, yet deep relaxation. It allows a receptivity to new experience, new forms,
            new sound perceptions in the movement toward wholeness” (<xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="K1989">Kenny, 1989, p. 88</xref>). This idea has a Husserlian parallel in his
            ideas on intentionality (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="KC2015">Käufer &amp; Chimero,
               2015</xref>). More recently, Carolyn and I were collaborating on a work that was left
            unpublished when a book on mindfulness in the creative arts therapies was abandoned by
            the editors. In this draft, she writes,</p>
         <disp-quote>
            <p>As I conduct my clinical practice, I release any hierarchical assumptions and
               perceive everyone, every living entity, as equal. Each person has a special value and
               unique gifts that were bestowed upon her/him by the Creator. In this sense, my
               practice is informed by my intention to help my clients to recognize their unique
               gifts, to express them, and to act on them. My spiritual approach, as a Native
               American, is egalitarian. I learn as much from my clients as they learn from me.
               Every encounter is an invitation to change or modulate my own body, heart, mind, and
               soul. My job, as a therapist, is to assist my clients in the creation of beauty “As
               one moves toward beauty, one moves toward wholeness.” (<xref ref-type="bibr"
                  rid="K1989">Kenny, 1989</xref>).” (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="KM2010">Kenny &amp;
                  Merrill, 2010</xref>).</p>
         </disp-quote>
         <p>In this way, it is not surprising that her work embraced field theory: dynamic,
            moveable, open to and inclusive of individual differences and ambiguities, subjective
            and intersubjective.</p>
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Phenomenology</title>
         <p>Carolyn Kenny’s theoretical model arose from a phenomenological inquiry into her direct
            experience of being from her entire field of existence (<xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="K1989">1989</xref>). She attempts to demonstrate the “phenomenological
            attitude”, which she describes briefly in “The Earth is our Mother” (<xref
               ref-type="bibr" rid="K2006">Kenny, 2006</xref>).</p>
         <disp-quote>
            <p>The phenomenological attitude is a formal term in phenomenology. It indicates a
               perceptive capability that is free from the mere appearance of things and favors the
               lived experience of perception. It is distinguished from ‘the natural attitude’,
               which is more influenced by sensory data or the limitations of the physical world
                  (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K2006">2006, p. 89</xref>).</p>
         </disp-quote>
         <p>What was it about phenomenology that attracted Kenny at that time? What awakened her to
            the possibilities within that philosophy for music therapy? I speculate that there are a
            few key intersections between her direct clinical experiences and the phenomenological
            framework that resulted in a feeling of resonance for her. First, Husserl’s notion that
            meaning is made through the apprehension and conscious awareness of ‘essences’ of
            experience (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1989">Kenny, 1989,</xref> <xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="KC2015">Käufer &amp; Chimero, 2015</xref>). Husserl argued that essences are
            subject to change over time and are contextually and culturally bound. Husserl does not
            limit the focus of phenomenology to concepts only but acknowledges non-conceptual
            features of consciousness. Finally, he makes space for subjectivity in the apprehension
            of experience (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="KC2015">Käufer &amp; Chimero 2015</xref>). All
            of these ideas were relevant to Kenny in 1989 and remain relevant to our discipline
            today.</p>
         <p>Second, Kenny addresses the problem of language and description— this was also one
            subject of discussion at the “Music in the Life of Man” symposium in 1982—in The Field
            of Play in 1989, and the discourse is relevant today. Husserl at times refers to his
            methodology as “descriptive psychology” and proposed arriving upon essential meanings
            through careful, elaborate description of experience (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="H1965"
               >Husserl, 1965</xref>). Kenny elaborates on this in <italic>The Field of
               Play</italic> and specifically introduces a musical term: <italic>variations</italic>
            to her phenomenological language as follows:</p>
         <disp-quote>
            <p>The heart of this method is examining various possibilities of what may be examples,
               pictures or images of the phenomenon in order to determine what are its essential
               elements. These variations need not be restricted to the factual or the possible, but
               may be purely imaginative, or represent pure perception on the part of the observer.
                  (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1989">1989, p. 58</xref>)</p>
         </disp-quote>
         <p>Third, Kenny explicitly acknowledges Husserl in the notion of phenomenology as an act of
            consciousness. She chooses to use Grossman’s (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="G1984"
               >1984</xref>) definition of phenomenology as “the study of the essence of
            consciousness” (pp. 54-55) but also cycles back to Husserl with the reminder that
            phenomenology grew out of transcendental philosophy—which was concerned with raising
            consciousness. Reflective of Husserl’s assertions that essences can be embodied and
            non-conceptual, that phenomenological methodology involves conscious intention and the
            suspension of pre-understandings, she incorporates this notion of consciousness into her
            model as connected to the mind-body-sense (p. 57) and writes,” In this figure the new
            element is consciousness, now joined to sensation. The link liberates consciousness from
            the realm of the abstract and expands it to include the world of concrete experience or
            sensation” (p. 56).</p>
         <p>Husserl outlines his methodology as a science of consciousness through a number of
            stages. Relevant to Kenny’s work are the ‘reductions’. The first is
               <italic>transcendental reduction </italic>– which is an act or process of conscious
            intention. The task is to suspend previous experience, judgements, ordinary or
            stereotypical beliefs. This is what is meant by the phenomenological terms ‘bracketing’
            and ‘epoche’ (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="KC2015">Käufer &amp; Chimero, 2015</xref>). In
            Kenny’s case, she was required to shift her clinically informed, stereotypical view of
            her client Debbie — who changes in Kenny’s mind-perception from ‘Drooling Debbie’ to a
            ‘field of beauty’ (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1996a">1996, p. 57</xref>).</p>
         <p>The second reduction is termed <italic>eidetic reduction, </italic>and Kenny explains
            this as the means through which essences are perceived. She introduces Husserl’s ‘free
            phantasy variation’ as epistemology. Under her guidance, I engaged a free phantasie
            variation in my master’s thesis <italic>Rise up Singing: A model for consciousness
               through the therapists’ reflections on an improvisational music therapy group for
               persons with end-stage dementia </italic>(<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="M1998">Merrill,
               1998</xref>). In this study, I replicate Kenny’s methodology through my own aesthetic
            replication and use free-verse poetry, art (mandala drawing), and analysis across
            several bracketed music therapy sessions (recorded) in the search for essences. These
            culminated in a proposed model for consciousness which may be accessed by individuals
            with Dementia through improvised music.</p>
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>The problem of interpretation</title>
         <p>Kenny began as a pure phenomenologist and eventually understood that there could be no
            process of induction or deduction without an inherent and associative hermeneutic or
            interpretive process. Eventually for her, the two became an inseparable part of meaning
            making in music therapy - direct experience through the senses (aesthetic phenomenology)
            and interpretation and analysis (hermeneutic). She writes (and it is really her voice
            here in this collaborative piece):</p>
         <disp-quote>
            <p>It is virtually impossible to separate hermeneutics from phenomenology, since the
               practice of phenomenology also requires a deep reflexivity on the part of the
               researcher. Like hermeneutics, phenomenology keeps returning to the subject of the
               study and continues to reanalyze and reinterpret data until essences have been
               discovered, or as some might say, the essences have been revealed.” (<xref
                  ref-type="bibr" rid="KLL2005">Kenny, Langenberg &amp; Loewy, 2005,
               p.342</xref>)</p>
         </disp-quote>
         <p>This view is reflective of the hermeneutic view that ‘to exist is to interpret’ (<xref
               ref-type="bibr" rid="MN1999">McNamara, 1999, p. 164</xref>). Over the many years of
            Carolyn’s mentoring of me, she indeed linked phenomenology and hermeneutics in a kind of
            partnership of inquiry that was a framework and way of understanding symbolic
            experiences in music therapy. She taught me that Art is inherently hermeneutic in the
            sense that it is interpretive in nature.</p>
         <p>She was interested in the work of Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty early on and these
            philosophers are represented in <italic>The Field of Play</italic>, where she begins
            discussing hermeneutics (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="K1989">1989, p. 59</xref>). She
            was attracted to the idea of holistic perception and reflection on that perception. In
            1989, she spent very little space explaining hermeneutics, but later contributed to a
            longer, more detailed description in collaboration with colleagues Mechtild
            Jahn-Langenberg and Joanne Loewy (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="KLL2005">2005</xref>). In
            more recent years she embraced the work of Hans Georg Gadamer (personal conversation)
            and encouraged me to delve into Gadamer’s hermeneutics myself, especially in preparation
            for a phenomenology symposium we attended together in 2013. Given what I know to be her
            profound connection to Gadamer, it is surprising to me that she did not publish more
            extensively on his work and its relevance to music therapy theory. What is clear is that
            she felt this work to be deeply informative for our discipline. I will try to summarize
            what I believe to be the parts of Gadamer’s work that most resonated with Carolyn
            Kenny.</p>
         <p>Gadamer is associated with research in the performing arts (<xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="MN1999">McNamara, 1999</xref>). He argues that human science must engage a
            methodology that is unique and different from that used in natural science; and that
            methodology must explore the process of interpretation (<xref ref-type="bibr"
               rid="G2004">Gadamer, 2004</xref>). Gadamer is openly anti-objectivist, and explicitly
            turns to the subjective in the search for meaning. Inherent in this methodology is an
            interchange between the pre-understanding of the interpreter and the phenomenon itself
            in its context (culture, performance space, etc). This is key in Kenny’s attraction to
            this work. Given her theory— that places the relationship between the music therapist
            and the ‘client’ and the music that arises between them at the center of the theory—
            there could be no more resonant philosophical grounding for her work than this. Further,
            that meaning and interpretation of meaning can be arrived upon through the shared
            musical experience (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="M1998">Merrill, 1998</xref>).</p>
         <p>Kenny agreed with Gadamer’s assertion that we exist in a symbol-rich phenomenological
            world. It is not possible to have an experience of ‘the world’ that is ‘outside the
            network of symbols and make up our culture’ (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="MN1999"
               >McNamara, 1999 p. 164</xref>). Kenny believed that alienation from meaningful symbol
            systems was a root cause of suffering associated with modernity and post-modernity and,
            along with Spretnak (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="S1991">1991</xref>), advocated for
            reclaiming meaning through reconnecting with traditional symbol systems (<xref
               ref-type="bibr" rid="K1980">1980</xref>). Symbols and symbol systems are the
            vocabulary of the arts: music, dance, visual art, poetry, writing; and can be extended
            to include non-verbal body movements, gesture and vocal inflection as expression, which
            I argue is the vocabulary of music therapy.</p>
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
      <!-- sec lvl 2 begin -->
      <sec>
         <title>Conclusion</title>
         <p>Carolyn Kenny <italic>lived </italic>phenomenologically and hermeneutically. Rather than
            being influenced by these philosophies, they became a part of her way of being in and
            knowing her world-experience. Indeed, she embodied the phenomenological attitude.
            Becoming aware of and mindfully suspending pre-understandings, opening up the
            consciousness to essences was a way of being for her, not simply a cognitive exercise or
            research methodology. This attitude permeated her being in the world, in her work, in
            her teaching and mentoring, and in her writing. While she was influenced tremendously by
            Husserl, Kenny’s understanding of Phenomenology in all of its permutations was
            prodigious and nuanced.</p>
         <p>When I reflect on the contribution that Carolyn made to music therapy theory through
            articulating her depth interpretation of Phenomenology (and its inherent hermeneutic), a
            part of a Sikh sacred prayer comes to mind. One interpretation is: <italic>“their faces
               shine with illumination, and they take many others with them across the world
               ocean”.</italic> Carolyn Kenny took many of us across the world ocean with her and
            will continue to do so.</p>
      </sec>
      <!-- sec lvl 2 end -->
   </body>
   <back>
      <ref-list>
         <ref id="FG1989">
            <!--Forinash, M., & Gonzalez, D. (1989). A phenomenological perspective of music therapy. <italic>Music Therapy, 8,</italic> 35-46. <uri>https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/mt/8.1.35</uri>.-->
            <element-citation publication-type="journal" publication-format="web">
               <person-group person-group-type="author">
                  <name>
                     <surname>Forinash</surname>
                     <given-names>M</given-names>
                  </name>
                  <name>
                     <surname>Gonzalez</surname>
                     <given-names>D</given-names>
                  </name>
               </person-group>
               <year>1989</year>
               <article-title>A phenomenological perspective of music therapy</article-title>
               <source>Music Therapy</source>
               <volume>8</volume>
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