Date of Award
5-2018
Document Type
Thesis
Degree Name
Master of Arts (MA)
College/School
College of the Arts
Department/Program
John J. Cali School of Music
Thesis Sponsor/Dissertation Chair/Project Chair
Brian Abrams
Committee Member
Marissa Silverman
Committee Member
Michael Viega
Abstract
Music is an accessible tool for positive change within people and societies, even in places facing socioeconomic marginalization due to poverty, discrimination, and lack of access to resources. Social capital has to do with the resources and networks available within society, which may help confront issues faced by individuals and communities. Community Music Therapy (CoMT) and the music education movement known as El Sistema both utilize music—understood as social capital—to address social justice. The purpose of this study was to comparatively examine the ways in which CoMT and El Sistema programs may address the empowerment needs of individuals and communities facing socioeconomic marginalization and suggest how these two approaches may be able to work synergistically to achieve their shared goals. Its findings reveal many parallels and divergencies between El Sistema and CoMT in terms of the role of the music, program structure, social justice goals, outcomes, music education practice, areas of intersection, existing scholoarly research, and criticisms each has received.
Recommended Citation
Eulacio-Guevara, Virginia Carolina, "Community Music Therapy and El Sistema : Addressing the Empowerment Needs of Marginalized Individuals and Their Communities" (2018). Theses, Dissertations and Culminating Projects. 129.
https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/etd/129