In a Big Voice
An autoethnography on entering, being in, and leaving the field of music therapy
Cumine, Colby
In this autoethnography, I utilized a handful of different techniques to recall, examine, and share my experiences while entering, being in, and leaving the field of music therapy. Those included: chronological listing, narrative journaling, songwriting, lyric analysis, and external collaborators. Examining the autoethnography revealed specific themes about my experience with music therapy, including the role of my identity and privilege, systemic pressures, resistance to systemic pressures, non-profit specific ethics, and community support. Sharing these specific experiences and themes aims to add to a growing literature of music therapy burnout, including why music therapists leave the field, what specific experiences feel like, and where music therapists go after leaving the field.
Hadley, Susan
Miller, VernGumble, Maevon
2024
Slippery Rock University of PennsylvaniaCollege of Liberal ArtsMusic
Master of Music Therapy (MMT)
Masters Degree
Music Therapy
Dissertation/Thesis
The copyright to this item is owned by the author and falls under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Public License. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)