Feminist Music Therapists in North America: Their Lives and Their Practices

This survey study investigated the lives and practices of those in North America who self-identify as feminist music therapists. Earlier reports from this survey studied: 1) the experiences of music therapists, with a comparison of men, women, and their 1990 counterparts (Curtis, 2013d); 2) the exp...

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Main Author: Sandra L. Curtis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: GAMUT - Grieg Academy Music Therapy Research Centre (NORCE & University of Bergen) 2015-06-01
Series:Voices
Subjects:
Online Access:https://voices.no/index.php/voices/article/view/2273
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spelling doaj-9faebaca0dc04f27ae969e84fc9447af2020-11-25T00:44:05ZengGAMUT - Grieg Academy Music Therapy Research Centre (NORCE & University of Bergen)Voices1504-16112015-06-0115210.15845/voices.v15i2.812Feminist Music Therapists in North America: Their Lives and Their PracticesSandra L. Curtis0Department of Creative Arts Therapies, Faculty of Fine Arts, Concordia University, Montréal, Québec. This survey study investigated the lives and practices of those in North America who self-identify as feminist music therapists. Earlier reports from this survey studied: 1) the experiences of music therapists, with a comparison of men, women, and their 1990 counterparts (Curtis, 2013d); 2) the experiences of music therapists who self-identify as community music therapists (Curtis, 2015); and 3) the experiences of music therapists in Canada as they compare with their U.S. counterparts (Curtis, in press, a). This current and final report explored the experiences of those in Canada and the United States who self-identify as feminist music therapists (50 from the 682 respondents). Areas of similarities and differences were noted between feminist music therapy respondents, Community Music Therapy respondents, and survey respondents as a whole. Similarities existed in terms of: age; gender (predominantly female) and ethnicity makeup (predominantly Caucasian); career satisfaction; and degree and nature of concerns in their lives. Differences existed in that: 1) greater numbers of feminist music therapy respondents worked in academic settings and had higher levels of education; 2) more feminist music therapists felt there was an impact of sex discrimination in peoples’ lives than did the community music therapists, or survey respondents as a whole (98%, 68.5%, and 67% respectively); 3) more feminist music therapy respondents held concerns about discrimination across many other intersections such as race/ethnicity and sexual orientation (98%, 74%, and 76% respectively); and 4) significantly more in Canada self-identified as feminist music therapists than did their U.S. counterparts. Qualitative analysis of respondents’ thoughts on feminist music therapy identified the following themes: being a feminist, belief and orientation, and working for empowerment and equality. The potential contribution that feminist music therapy offers the music therapy profession as a whole was highlighted in terms of its understanding of the impact of multiple sources of marginalization and privilege. This potential contribution could be enhanced through future research into the profiles of feminist music therapists living in other parts of the world. https://voices.no/index.php/voices/article/view/2273feminist music therapistsprofilesprofessional identitylivespracticesCanada & the United States of America
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandra L. Curtis
spellingShingle Sandra L. Curtis
Feminist Music Therapists in North America: Their Lives and Their Practices
Voices
feminist music therapists
profiles
professional identity
lives
practices
Canada & the United States of America
author_facet Sandra L. Curtis
author_sort Sandra L. Curtis
title Feminist Music Therapists in North America: Their Lives and Their Practices
title_short Feminist Music Therapists in North America: Their Lives and Their Practices
title_full Feminist Music Therapists in North America: Their Lives and Their Practices
title_fullStr Feminist Music Therapists in North America: Their Lives and Their Practices
title_full_unstemmed Feminist Music Therapists in North America: Their Lives and Their Practices
title_sort feminist music therapists in north america: their lives and their practices
publisher GAMUT - Grieg Academy Music Therapy Research Centre (NORCE & University of Bergen)
series Voices
issn 1504-1611
publishDate 2015-06-01
description This survey study investigated the lives and practices of those in North America who self-identify as feminist music therapists. Earlier reports from this survey studied: 1) the experiences of music therapists, with a comparison of men, women, and their 1990 counterparts (Curtis, 2013d); 2) the experiences of music therapists who self-identify as community music therapists (Curtis, 2015); and 3) the experiences of music therapists in Canada as they compare with their U.S. counterparts (Curtis, in press, a). This current and final report explored the experiences of those in Canada and the United States who self-identify as feminist music therapists (50 from the 682 respondents). Areas of similarities and differences were noted between feminist music therapy respondents, Community Music Therapy respondents, and survey respondents as a whole. Similarities existed in terms of: age; gender (predominantly female) and ethnicity makeup (predominantly Caucasian); career satisfaction; and degree and nature of concerns in their lives. Differences existed in that: 1) greater numbers of feminist music therapy respondents worked in academic settings and had higher levels of education; 2) more feminist music therapists felt there was an impact of sex discrimination in peoples’ lives than did the community music therapists, or survey respondents as a whole (98%, 68.5%, and 67% respectively); 3) more feminist music therapy respondents held concerns about discrimination across many other intersections such as race/ethnicity and sexual orientation (98%, 74%, and 76% respectively); and 4) significantly more in Canada self-identified as feminist music therapists than did their U.S. counterparts. Qualitative analysis of respondents’ thoughts on feminist music therapy identified the following themes: being a feminist, belief and orientation, and working for empowerment and equality. The potential contribution that feminist music therapy offers the music therapy profession as a whole was highlighted in terms of its understanding of the impact of multiple sources of marginalization and privilege. This potential contribution could be enhanced through future research into the profiles of feminist music therapists living in other parts of the world.
topic feminist music therapists
profiles
professional identity
lives
practices
Canada & the United States of America
url https://voices.no/index.php/voices/article/view/2273
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