1st Edition

Visual Communication for Social Work Practice Power, Culture, Analysis

By Sonia M. Tascón Copyright 2019
190 Pages
by Routledge

190 Pages
by Routledge

190 Pages
by Routledge

How are we to understand how the dominance of visual images and representations in late modernity affects Social Work practice, research and education? Social workers are increasingly using still and moving images to illustrate their work, to create new knowledge, and to further specific groups’ interests. As a profession in which communication is central, visual practices are becoming ever more... Read more

Foreword by Professor Jim Ife; Acknowledgements; Part I. Framings; Chapter 1: Just Images?: Making Visible The Invisible, or, Why Visual Literacy is Important to Social Work; Chapter 2: Modernity, Social Work, and Professional Modes of Communication: Certainty vs. Ambivalence?; Chapter 3: Social Work and Visual Media: Not All Bad News; Part II. Practices; Chapter 4: Social Work and Research: Visual Methodologies and Everyday, Embodied, Experiences; Chapter 5: Giving Voice When Words Are Not Enough: Social Workers’ Practice With Images; Chapter 6: Human Rights Activism: Decolonising the humanitarian gaze and creating relationships of solidarity; Part III. Reflections; Introduction to Reflection; Chapter 7: Social Policy and Social Change: Popular culture, New Media, and Social Work (By Jioj Ravulo); Chapter 8: An Imaginarium for Socially Just Ideas: Making sense of visual (and other non-textual) practice (By Mick Houlbrook); Chapter 9: The Video Essay for Social Work Education: Visualising Knowledge; Index

Biography



Sonia M. Tascón has been a Social Work practitioner and scholar for over 20 years. As a practitioner, she worked in child protection, community work, clinical and hospital social work. As a scholar, she has published extensively in areas pertinent to Social Work, namely, race and whiteness, ethics, and human rights film and film festivals. Sonia has both a PhD in Social Work, and a PhD in Film Studies.