1st Edition
Art, Creativity and Imagination in Social Work Practice.
Introduction – Prue Chamberlayne (Open University) and Martin Smith (Buckinghamshire Social Services)
Part one. Use of the self in creative expression.
Chapter one. Where is the love? Art, aesthetics and research. Yasmin Gunaratnam. University of Central Lancashire.
Chapter two. Georgie’s girl: last conversation with my father. Karen Lee. University of British Columbia.
Chapter three. Innovative rehabilitation after head injury: examining the use of a creative intervention. Claire Smith. University of Ottowa.
Chapter four. An interplay of learning, creativity and narrative biography in a mental health setting. Bertie’s story. Olivia Sagan. University of the Arts. London.
Part two. Theoretical underpinnings.
Chapter five. Smoke without fire? Social workers’ fears of threats and accusations. Martin Smith. Buckinghamshire Social Services Department.
Chapter six. Creating communication. Self-examination as a therapeutic method for children. Carolus van Nijnatten and Frida van Doorn. University of Utrecht.
Chapter seven. Arts based learning in restorative youth justice: embodied, moral and aesthetic. Lynn Froggett. University of Central Lancashire.
Part three. The wider community.
Chapter eight. ‘Ways of knowing and showing’: imagination and representation in feminist participatory social research. Victoria Foster. University of Central Lancashire.
Chapter nine. Representations of violence: learning with Tate Modern. Hannele Weir. City University. London.
Chapter ten. ‘I thought I wasn’t creative but…’ Explorations of cultural capital with Liverpool young people. Paula Pope. Liverpool John Moores University.
Biography
Prue Chamberlayne has used biographical methods in a range of research and policy settings. Retired from the Faculty of Health and Social Care at the Open University, she is now writes poetry, and is involved in a community development project in Uganda.
Martin Smith is the Practitioner-Manager of the Buckinghamshire Social Services Out of Hours Emergency Team. He is particularly interested in researching and writing about social workers’ experiences of stress and fear.






