Beyond the roof of the world : music, prayer, and healing in the Pamir mountains
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Beyond the roof of the world : music, prayer, and healing in the Pamir mountains
Oxford University Press, 2009
Available at 1 libraries
  Aomori
  Iwate
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  Tochigi
  Gunma
  Saitama
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  Kyoto
  Osaka
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  Okayama
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  Kagoshima
  Okinawa
  Korea
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [213]-220) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Western medicine has conventionally separated music, science, and religion into distinct entities, yet traditional cultures throughout the world have always viewed music as a bridge that connects and balances the physical with the spiritual to promote health and healing. As people in even the most technologically advanced nations across the globe struggle with obtaining affordable and reliable healthcare, more and more people are now turning to these ancient cultural practices of holistic and ICAM healing (integrative, complementary, and alternative medicine). Beyond the Roof of the World convincingly demonstrates the relevance of medical ethnomusicology in light of the globally spreading ICAM approaches to health and healing. Revealing the Western separation of healing from spiritual and musical practices as a culturally determined phenomenon, Dr. Benjamin D. Koen confirms their underlying unity. In a place poetically known as the Roof of the World, the culture found within the towering Pamir Mountains of Badakhshan Tajikistan serves as the paradigm of ICAM healing practices.
Koen's extensive research and immersion into the Badakhshani culture provides a well-balanced "insider" perspective while maintaining an "observer's" view, as he effectively bridges the widespread gaps between ethnomusicology, health science, and music therapy. Moving beyond the paradigm of the Pamir Mountains to reach out to cultures across the globe, Koen infuses scholarship with lived experience and applied practice as he shows spirituality and musicality to be intimately intertwined with one's physical life, health and healing.
Table of Contents
- Language
- Pronunciation and Transliteration
- 1. Medical Ethnomusicology and the Ontology of Oneness
- 2. The Five Factors of Music, Prayer, Health, and Healing
- 3. Music-Prayer Dynamics and Cognitive Flexibility
- 4. Soundscape and Musical-Spiritual Entrainment
- 5. Healthscape, Mystical Poetry, and Multimodal Healing
- 6. Transformative Meaning In Sound, Empowered Sound In Culture
- 7. Human Certainty Principle, of Science, Spirituality, and Experience
- Notes
- References
- Index
by "Nielsen BookData"