Faculty Publications
Springsteen as Developmental Therapist: An Autoethnography
Document Type
Article
Journal/Book/Conference Title
Boss: The Biannual Online-Journal of Springsteen Studies
Volume
1
Issue
1
First Page
96
Last Page
120
Abstract
Based on differing theories of moral development proposed by Lawrence Kohlberg, Martin Hoffman, and John Gibbs, this paper posits that listening to Bruce Springsteen’s music can increase moral growth. Scores of Springsteen songs parallel psychological techniques used to increase moral development, such as being exposed to two or more beliefs that are contradictory, social perspective-taking by listening to moral dilemmas, gaining empathy with the distress that another person experiences, hypothetical contemplation, and meta-ethical reflection. Through qualitative-based autoethnographical storytelling, the author outlines how his moral development was enabled through such Springsteen songs as “Factory,” “Highway Patrolman,” “Independence Day,” “Johnny 99,” and “Used Cars,” as well as two self-disclosures from Springsteen’s Live 1975-85 album.
Department
Department of Health, Recreation, and Community Services
Original Publication Date
8-10-2014
DOI of published version
10.26443/boss.v1i1.18
Recommended Citation
Dieser, Rodney, "Springsteen as Developmental Therapist: An Autoethnography" (2014). Faculty Publications. 6376.
https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/6376