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Troubling Inheritances

Memory, Music, and Aging

Sara Cohen editor Professor or Dr Line Grenier editor Professor or Dr Ros Jennings editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:21st Mar '24

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Troubling Inheritances cover

Explores the relationship between music, memory, and ageing through a focus on "inheritance tracks," with contributions from leading scholars of popular music studies.

This book provides an interdisciplinary focus on music, memory, and ageing by examining how they intersect outside of a formal therapeutic context or framework and by offering a counter-narrative to age as decline. It contributes to the development of qualitative research methodologies by utilizing and reflecting on methods for studying music, memory, and ageing across diverse and interconnected contexts. Using the notion of inheritance to trouble its core themes of music, memory, ageing, and methodology, it examines different ways in which the concept of inheritance is understood but also how it commonly refers to the practice of passing on, and the connections this establishes across time and space. It confronts the ageist discourses that associate popular music predominantly with youth and that focus narrowly, and almost exclusively, on music’s therapeutic function for older adults. By presenting research which examines various intersections of music and ageing outside of a therapeutic context or framework, the book brings a much-needed intervention.

Troubling Inheritances uses a shared and sharing methodology to collect a fascinating collection of stories that songs have allowed or encouraged people to tell. Through an impressively wide range of international case studies, this collection highlights the centrality of music to our everyday experience as well as the ways we understand and narrate our lives. It also centres the role of those who came before us and those who will follow us, making rich connections between music, memory, mentorship, solidarity and inter-generational influence. These intimate, moving and memorable essays remind us of the things music reveals to us about ourselves and others. * Richard Elliott, Senior Lecturer in Music, Newcastle University, UK, and author of The Late Voice: Time, Age and Experience in Popular Music *

ISBN: 9781501369544

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

232 pages