Postmodern Social Work: Reflective Practice and Education

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Columbia University Press, Sep 24, 2019 - Social Science - 233 pages

How should social workers adapt to a time of widespread instability and uncertainty? How can social work practice account for the ever-increasing infiltration of technology and media images into our daily lives and mental states? In this book, Ken Moffatt turns to postmodern philosophy’s grappling with late capitalism and the omnipresence of technology in order to develop a new approach to reflective social work practice and critical pedagogy.

Postmodern Social Work attempts to reconcile postmodern thinkers with the realities of teaching social work to diverse student populations in a precarious era. Moffatt advocates an ideal of reflective practice that allows social workers to combine direct experience, social welfare, and social justice. Through a series of interlocking essays focused on the theoretical underpinnings of reflective practice in the context of social work education, he explores the implications of postmodern theory for social work practice. Drawing on thinkers such as Michel Foucault, Judith Butler, Julia Kristeva, Gilles Deleuze, and Félix Guattari, Moffatt lays out a path forward for reflective social work, providing new ways of thinking that collapse old categories and integrate direct practice with community engagement and social analysis. Postmodern Social Work offers an approach to practice and teaching that considers the shifting landscape of social change while remaining true to social work’s primary concerns of inclusion and justice.

 

Contents

Acknowledgments
1974
Discourse in the Context of Precariousness
1985
The Social and the Self
2003
Reflective Practice as a Form of Consciousness
2022
The Social Work Classroom as a Play of Dynamic Elements
The Dispossessed Self
Reflective Postmodern Social Work in the Context
Works Cited
Index
Copyright

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About the author (2019)

Ken Moffatt is professor of social work and Jack Layton Chair of the Faculty of Arts and Faculty of Community Services at Ryerson University. He is the editor of Troubled Masculinities: Reimagining Urban Men (2012).

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