2017
DOI: 10.1080/14780887.2017.1359710
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Rhizomatic affective spaces and the therapeutic potential of music in prison: a qualitative meta-synthesis

Abstract: Research literature supports that music programmes in prisons can have a therapeutic effect in prisoners' lives that could promote personal development and assist the process towards desistance. The authors use a meta-synthetic approach to examine 12 qualitative articles published worldwide to explore the therapeutic potential of such programmes. The findings suggest that music programmes in prison are perceived by participating prisoners as a liberating process which encourages participation and allows for no… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…This line of thought resembles the conclusion of Kougiali et al (2018) in their metasynthetic study examining 12 qualitative articles in order to explore the therapeutic potential of music programs in prison. They suggest that music activates rhizomatic affective spaces in prison, a process in which music might disrupt the prison experience and create affective spaces to which prisoners can escape in order to cope and regain hope before returning to their everyday routine.…”
Section: Supportive Vs Dangerous Use Of Musicmentioning
confidence: 92%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…This line of thought resembles the conclusion of Kougiali et al (2018) in their metasynthetic study examining 12 qualitative articles in order to explore the therapeutic potential of music programs in prison. They suggest that music activates rhizomatic affective spaces in prison, a process in which music might disrupt the prison experience and create affective spaces to which prisoners can escape in order to cope and regain hope before returning to their everyday routine.…”
Section: Supportive Vs Dangerous Use Of Musicmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…This strategy relates to the daily self-exposure of prisoners to music; however, it is consistent with studies examining the influence of a less spontaneous exposure to music, in the form of music therapy and educational programs within prison. Studies stress the sense of freedom experienced through such programs, which enabled prisoners to temporarily escape the authoritative and institutionalized environment thus experiencing freedom, hope, happiness and joy (Bilby et al, 2013;Brewster, 2010;De Viggiani et al, 2010;Kougiali et al, 2018;Tuastad and O'Grady, 2013;Winder et al, 2015). This may be explained by Pratt (1990), who contended that spaces are not just physical and therefore music can generate 'enclaves of autonomy,' non-physical spaces that create an alternative psychological reality, an imaginary 'new life' within the existing one.…”
Section: Supportive Vs Dangerous Use Of Musicmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The research methodologies used in the wider body of both prison music and community music research recognize the complexities of the research context and sound arguments are made for the use of qualitative approaches (Matsunobu and Bresler 2014;Kougiali, Einat and Liebling 2018), yet the evaluation culture of measurement is pushing researchers to use quantitative methodologies that may not be appropriate to the types of research questions being asked (Lonie 2018). Finally, knowing that the funding of future projects rests on the evaluation of current projects puts researchers in a potentially difficult position.…”
Section: Methodological Challenges To Critical Evaluation Of Prison and Community Music Projectsmentioning
confidence: 99%