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The Deceptive Cadence as a Metaphor for Life : Listening with Care through a Crisis Situation

Arvidson, Mats LU orcid (2025)
Abstract (Swedish)
A meditation on gratitude, strangeness, and listening with care

A deceptive cadence suggests resolution but withholds it, opening instead to uncertainty, fragility, and the unexpected. This philosophical-existential inquiry takes that musical figure as a metaphor for life itself—disrupted by illness, sustained by another’s gift, and reshaped by the presence of death. Music here becomes a vital companion: pianist Brad Mehldau’s “Remembering before all this” evokes the presence of detachment during the pandemic; Gustav Mahler’s “Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen” reflects on the humanities’ distance from the world; his “Ninth Symphony” invites listening with care, asking whose ears we lend when we listen; and Avishai Cohen’s... (More)
A meditation on gratitude, strangeness, and listening with care

A deceptive cadence suggests resolution but withholds it, opening instead to uncertainty, fragility, and the unexpected. This philosophical-existential inquiry takes that musical figure as a metaphor for life itself—disrupted by illness, sustained by another’s gift, and reshaped by the presence of death. Music here becomes a vital companion: pianist Brad Mehldau’s “Remembering before all this” evokes the presence of detachment during the pandemic; Gustav Mahler’s “Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen” reflects on the humanities’ distance from the world; his “Ninth Symphony” invites listening with care, asking whose ears we lend when we listen; and Avishai Cohen’s setting of Zelda Mishkovsky’s poem “Departure” confronts the silence of death. These works help us think, feel, and listen through fragility. Moving between narrative and reflection, this book explores transplantation in the form of intrusion, life as a deceptive cadence, and how survival unsettle boundaries between the self and the other, body and identity, humanities and medicine. Inspired by Jean-Luc Nancy’s The Intruder, it argues that boundaries—often seen as obstacles—can sustain survival and meaning. At heart, it is a meditation on gratitude, strangeness, and listening with care, raising urgent questions about human values within the humanities.

Mats Arvidson is Associate Professor and Senior Lecturer at the Department of Arts and Cultural Sciences, Lund University, Sweden. His research explores the sense-making processes that emerge in the encounter between human beings and medialities of different kinds. This book is an expression of that exploration where the body is at the center of this mediality.
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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
alternative title
Den bedrägliga kadensen som metafor för livet : Att lyssna med omsorg i en krissituation
publishing date
type
Book/Report
publication status
in press
subject
keywords
Music, Musicology, Intermedial Studies, Medical Humanities, Philosophy, Literature, Hermeneutics, Phenomenology, Jean-Luc Nancy, Body and soul, Body and identity, Body and mind, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Paul Ricœur, Lawrence Kramer, Auscultation, Listening, Crisis, Covid-19, Pandemic, Cancer, Transplant, Illness
publisher
Cambridge Scholars Publishing
project
The Deceptive Cadence as a Metaphor for Life: Listening with Care through a Crisis Situation
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8b706a8c-3481-4aee-a17c-37fcf0cf43c4
date added to LUP
2025-11-23 15:48:16
date last changed
2025-12-01 16:29:56
@book{8b706a8c-3481-4aee-a17c-37fcf0cf43c4,
  abstract     = {{A meditation on gratitude, strangeness, and listening with care<br/><br/>A deceptive cadence suggests resolution but withholds it, opening instead to uncertainty, fragility, and the unexpected. This philosophical-existential inquiry takes that musical figure as a metaphor for life itself—disrupted by illness, sustained by another’s gift, and reshaped by the presence of death. Music here becomes a vital companion: pianist Brad Mehldau’s “Remembering before all this” evokes the presence of detachment during the pandemic; Gustav Mahler’s “Ich bin der Welt abhanden gekommen” reflects on the humanities’ distance from the world; his “Ninth Symphony” invites listening with care, asking whose ears we lend when we listen; and Avishai Cohen’s setting of Zelda Mishkovsky’s poem “Departure” confronts the silence of death. These works help us think, feel, and listen through fragility. Moving between narrative and reflection, this book explores transplantation in the form of intrusion, life as a deceptive cadence, and how survival unsettle boundaries between the self and the other, body and identity, humanities and medicine. Inspired by Jean-Luc Nancy’s The Intruder, it argues that boundaries—often seen as obstacles—can sustain survival and meaning. At heart, it is a meditation on gratitude, strangeness, and listening with care, raising urgent questions about human values within the humanities. <br/><br/>Mats Arvidson is Associate Professor and Senior Lecturer at the Department of Arts and Cultural Sciences, Lund University, Sweden. His research explores the sense-making processes that emerge in the encounter between human beings and medialities of different kinds. This book is an expression of that exploration where the body is at the center of this mediality.<br/>}},
  author       = {{Arvidson, Mats}},
  keywords     = {{Music; Musicology; Intermedial Studies; Medical Humanities; Philosophy; Literature; Hermeneutics; Phenomenology; Jean-Luc Nancy; Body and soul; Body and identity; Body and mind; Hans-Georg Gadamer; Paul Ricœur; Lawrence Kramer; Auscultation; Listening; Crisis; Covid-19; Pandemic; Cancer; Transplant; Illness}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{11}},
  publisher    = {{Cambridge Scholars Publishing}},
  title        = {{The Deceptive Cadence as a Metaphor for Life : Listening with Care through a Crisis Situation}},
  year         = {{2025}},
}